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From http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Global_Economy/JL12Dj02.html See also the similar GoldSeek version.
And see his Dec 14/15 Backwardation That Shook The World
Dec 12, 2008
Gold
fever sets in
By
Antal E Fekete
A
landmark in the saga of the collapsing international monetary system
was signaled on December 2, when gold went to backwardation for the
first time in history.
Backwardation is a market condition in
which futures prices are lower in the distant delivery months than in
the nearest delivery month. The facts are as follows: on December 2,
at the Comex in New York, December gold
futures (last delivery: December 31) were quoted at a 1.98% discount
to spot, while February gold futures (last delivery: February 27,
2009) were quoted at 0.14% discount to spot. (All percentages
annualized.) The condition got worse on December 3, when the
corresponding figures were 2% and 0.29%.
This means that the
gold basis [1] has turned negative. The backwardation continued and
worsened on December 8, 9, and 10, as shown by the corresponding
rates widening to 3.5% and 0.65%. It is nothing short of awesome.
Already there was a slight backwardation in gold at the
expiry of a previous active contract month, but it never spilled over
to the next active contract month, as it does now: backwardation in
the December contract is spilling over to the February contract,
which at last reading was 0.36%. Silver is also in backwardation,
with the discount on silver futures being about twice that on gold
futures.
This is a premonition of a coming gold fever of
unprecedented dimensions that will overwhelm
the world as soon as its significance is fully digested by the
doubting Thomases. The worsening of backwardation must be viewed in
the context of the gold price bouncing back from the lows of last
week. It shows that the "gold bashing" on Friday was done
in the December contract. It is quite revealing that the spot price
bounced back more than the futures price. The bulls are on the
warpath. They have unearthed the hatchet. They have stopped eating
from the hands of the clearing members.
As I wrote on
December 4 in my "Red Alert" note [2], the gold basis is a
pristine, incorruptible measure of trust,
or the lack of it in case it turns negative, in
paper money. Of course, it is too early to say whether gold
has gone to permanent backwardation, or whether the condition will
rectify itself (it probably will). Be that as it may, it does not
matter. The fact that it has happened is the
coup de grace for the regime of irredeemable currency. It will
bleed to death, maybe rather slowly, even if no other hits, blows or
shocks are dealt to the system. Very few people realize what is going
on and, of course, official sources and the news media won't be
helpful to them to explain the significance of all this. I am trying
to be helpful to the discriminating reader.
Gold
going to permanent backwardation means that gold is no longer for
sale at any price, whether it is quoted in dollars, yen, euros
or Swiss francs. The situation is exactly the same as it has been for
years: gold is not for sale at any price quoted
in Zimbabwe currency, however high the quote is. To put it
differently, all offers to sell gold are being withdrawn, whether it
concerns newly mined gold, scrap gold, bullion gold or coined gold. I
dubbed this event that has cast its long shadow forward for many a
year, the last contango in Washington - contango being the name for
the condition opposite to backwardation (namely, that of a positive
basis), and Washington being the city where the
paper-mill of the Potomac, the Federal Reserve Board, is
located.
This is a tongue-in-cheek way of saying that the jig
in Washington is up. The music has stopped on the players of musical
chairs. Those who have no gold in hand are out of luck. They won't
get it now through the regular channels. If they want it, they will
have to go to the black market. [The
introduction above is not in the Goldseek version of this
paper.]
Mish Shedlock published a disdainful criticism
of my theory on the worsening backwardation in gold (see note),
calling it "nonsense" (see references below). A friend of
his owns a seat on Nymex (a branch of Comex) who had this to say:
"I
have seen countless commodities go into backwardation for numerous
reasons, the most frequent being a radical temporary divergence
between immediate and overall demand. I have seen backwardations that
have lasted years. The article is based on the assumption that a
backwardation will necessarily lead to a breakdown of the delivery
mechanism. But for every breakdown of the delivery mechanism there
have been thousands of backwardations without a breakdown. Only if
and when an actual breakdown occurred would the conclusions that the
author drew make sense."
Well,
well, one can buy himself a seat on the Nymex for sure, and the price
is hefty these days, but Nymex does not deliver the understanding of
monetary science along with the seat. Nor
does any university anywhere in the world.
Mish
says that "there is nothing special about backwardation, period.
OK, they are rare in gold. So what?" Here is what. There is a
difference between "rare" and "non-existent".
Backwardation in gold has been non-existent, and for a very good
reason, too, as I have explained in my articles. (I also pointed out
that there have been "hiccups", or short-lived instances of
backwardation. They were temporary "logistical" bumps,
always resolved
within a day at most,
and they never ever spilled over to the next actively traded delivery
month.)
Mish needs to educate himself on the
fundamental difference between a monetary and a non-monetary
commodity before he
can grasp the idea that lasting backwardation in gold is tantamount
to the realization that "gold is no longer for sale at any
price".
The bottom line is that there is no fever like
gold fever. It is akin to St Vitus' dance that swept through the
Christian world just before the year 1,000 AD, affecting all the
people who expected the end of the world to happen at the turn of the
millennium. It was far worse than the mania that swept through the
world affecting all the people a thousand years later who expected
the 2K disaster to happen.
The
coming gold fever must be distinguished from tulipomania in
February 1637, when one single tulip fetched the equivalent of 20
times the annual income of a skilled worker. Gold fever is as
different from a bubble as real gold is from fools' gold. It is
visceral. It has to do with one's instinct for survival. It has no
patience with logical arguments. It is highly contagious, ultimately
affecting everybody. A bubble that never pops.
You may
ridicule the idea that, during a prolonged backwardation, all offers
to sell gold will be withdrawn. But a serious analyst must answer the
question why hundreds of millions of people having gold coins under
the mattress and in the cookie jar refuse to take the bait of
"risk-free" profits offered by backwardation. Such a thing
would never ever happen to a non-monetary commodity.
The
only successful corners in history were gold corners, aka -
hyperinflation. Keynesian
and Friedmanite economists in the pay of the government thought that
gold futures trading
would permanently short-circuit the
forces of gold backwardation, thus preventing hyperinflation from
ever happening. They were wrong.
In an article "The
Manipulation of Gold Prices" (see references), James
Conrad, Professor
Emeritus of Economics and former Dean of the School of Business
Administration at the University of Indianapolis, argues that
Bernanke is different. He understands that he needs a much higher
gold price in order to increase the efficiency of his airdrops. There
is no better way to distribute new money among prospective spenders
than putting it into the pockets of the gold bugs. (Conrad admits
that he is one.) This will induce a large spending spree, holding
deflationary pressures back.
According to Conrad, Bernanke is
well aware that the new money he is feverishly airdropping has not
stopped and will probably not stop the bloodbath in the stock market.
Further devastation of share prices will render pension funds
insolvent. To prevent this, the dollar needs a massive devaluation,
on the pattern of FD Roosevelt's tinkering with the value of gold. I
quote:
Anyone who reads the written works of our Fed Chairman will know that Bernanke's long term plan involves devaluing the dollar against gold. This is the exact opposite of the position of most prior chairmen. He has overtly stated his intentions toward gold, many times, in various articles, speeches and treatises written before he became Fed Chairman. He often extols the virtues of F D Roosevelt's gold revaluation/dollar devaluation back in 1934, and credits it with saving the nation from the Great Depression. According to Bernanke, devaluation of the dollar against gold was so effective in stimulating economic activity that the stock market rose sharply in 1934, immediately thereafter. That is something that the Fed wants to see happen again."
It is only a matter of time before gold is allowed to rise to its natural level. Assuming that about one half of the recent increase in Federal Reserve credit is neutralized, the monetized value of gold should be allowed to rise to between $7,500 and $9,000 per ounce as the world goes back to some type of a gold standard. In the nearer term, gold will rise to about $2,000 per ounce as the Fed abandons its hopeless campaign to support Comex short sellers in favor of saving the other, more productive, functions of various banks and insurers.
Revaluation of gold, and a return to a gold standard, is the only way that hyperinflation can be avoided while large numbers of paper currency units are released into the economy. This is because most of the rise in prices can be filtered into gold. As the asset value of gold rises, it will soak up excess dollars, euros, pounds, etc, while the appearance of an increased number of currency units will stimulate investor psychology; and lending and economic output will increase all over the world. Ben Bernanke and the other members of the FOMC Committee must know this, because it is basic economics.
It
is to be regretted that more of Conrad's
admirable paper cannot
be quoted here because of lack of space. [It
is here.]
To summarize:
Bernanke
is prepared to throw the issuers of paper gold at the Comex to the
wolves, as they have become useless, even a nuisance, by now.
Besides, the wolves must be appeased
lest they devour whatever remains of the US banking and insurance
system.
My own position is somewhat different from Conrad's.
In my view we are facing a world-wide elemental grassroot movement:
the flight into physical gold - witness the backwardation in gold. It
is irresistible, and will ultimately overtake all other market
forces. It will overwhelm official resistance.
An
intriguing case can be made, as is attempted by Conrad, that Bernanke
is intelligent enough to realize all this[,]
thinking that he can harness, if not
hijack, the grassroot movement for his own purposes. This is a wee
bit more intelligence than I can give credit for to the chairman, who
is a former academic himself. I find the thought surrealistic that
Bernanke wants to use gold as the safety valve through which he can
release steam from an overheating deflation one day, and from an
overheating inflation the next.
Be that as it may, the Brave
New World of irredeemable currency sans
the paper gold factory at Comex will
be an entirely different world from what we have been used to for the
past 36 years. I highlight the differences as I see them. This should
be helpful in the long run, even if this backwardation is temporary
and gold futures trading will return to normal, since permanent
backwardation is ultimately unavoidable.
Item 1:
Barrick and other gold producers
that still have an open hedge book will go bankrupt.
Item
2: Other
gold miners will, one after another, stop selling gold altogether,
and go into hibernation.
Item
3: Junior gold mines will
put off starting production indefinitely. They will consider their
gold ore reserves in the ground a safer store of value than paper
money in an insolvent bank.
Item
4: The closing of the
gold window at the Comex will furnish an
excuse for other issuers of paper gold including
the bullion banks to declare bankruptcy
fraudulently.
Item
5: GLD and other joint
depositories of gold will be under enormous pressure to default and
let the owners of the ETF shares hold the bag. Let them sue for the
gold. They won't get it: their contracts give them no
right to physical gold.
They will get small change, in paper. The principals will cut up the
gold pie among themselves. No crumbs will trickle down to
shareholders.
Item 6:
Even allocated and segregated metal
account gold is not safe. The temptation on the account providers to
default will be irresistible. They are not going to release the gold
until expressly ordered by the courts, and will make sure that no
gold will be left by then.
Item
7: Central
banks
forfeit
their gold under leases due
to backwardation, causing an uproar of citizens whose patrimony was
sequestered and dissipated in such an ignominious manner.
Item
8: The
only market for gold will be the fragmented black markets in various
countries each
charging a price whatever the traffic can bear. All legal protection
of the ownership of and trade in gold will be suspended. The Dark Age
will descend on the trading world, just as it did when the Roman
Empire collapsed.
Our
present experiment with irredeemable currency can last only as long
as it is able to support futures markets in gold. The
declining gold basis is the hour glass: when it runs out and the last
grain of sand drops, gold fever will bleed the futures markets of
cash gold, and the days of the regime of irredeemable currency are
numbered.
Previous episodes of experimentation lasted no more
than 18 years, or half as long as the present one, which has taken 36
years so far, a world record. Of
course, none of the earlier episodes were supported by futures
markets. Forewarned,
forearmed. Get ready and move closer to the doors. When the curtain
falls on the last contango in Washington, there will be panic and
some people may get trampled to death at the exit.
Dear Mish,
lower your gun. The topic of gold backwardation is not for you.
References:
Monetary
versus Non-monetary Commodities, April
[May?]
25, 2006 relativeLink,
absoluteLink, original
The
Last Contango in Washington, June 30, 2006 relativeLink,
absoluteLink, original
Has
the Curtain Fallen on the Last Contango in Washington? December 8,
2008 relativeLink,
absoluteLink, original
(These
and other articles of the author can be accessed at the website
www.professorfekete.com
)
The Nonsense about Gold Backwardation, etc., by Mike (Mish)
Shedwick, December 7, 2008,
www.globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
The Manipulation of Gold
Prices, by James Conrad, December 4, 2008, www.seekingalpha.com
Gold
in Backwardation? Not so fast ... , by "Hard Asset Investor",
December 2, 2008, ibid.
The Battle against Contango, by Brad
Zigler, November 20, 2008, www.hardassetsinvestor.com
Notes
1.
This edited article includes elements from Professor Fekete's
previous newsletter, Red
Alert, which initially signalled the backwardation discussed here
and includes a more detailed account of the gold basis, backwardation
and contango.
2. See Red
Alert at www.professorfekete.com
or relativeLink,
absoluteLink, original
Antal
E Fekete has
since 2001 been consulting professor at Sapientia University,
Cluj-Napoca, Romania. In 1996, Professor Fekete won the first prize
in the International Currency Essay contest sponsored by Bank Lips
Ltd of Switzerland.
(Copyright
2008 Antal E Fekete).