Showing posts with label Silver. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Silver. Show all posts

Monday, April 29, 2013

UCX, India's sixth commodity exchange goes live, introduces Gold, Silver contracts

In precious metals, it has introudced Gold l kg May, July, September and November 2013 contracts and Gold Nano 100 gm, June, July, August, September, October, November and December contracts. Silver 30 kg contract for delivery in June August , November and Silver Nano contracts for June, July, August, September, October, November and December were introduced at launch of the exchange.

MUMBAI (Bullion Street): The Universal Commodity Exchange, the national level electronic commodity exchange in India,has gone live from Friday 19th April, 2013.

In precious metals, it has introudced Gold l kg May, July, September and November 2013 contracts and Gold Nano 100 gm, June, July, August, September, October, November and December contracts. Silver 30 kg contract for delivery in June August , November and Silver Nano contracts for June, July, August, September, October, November and December were introduced at launch of the exchange.?

Promoted by Commex Technology in joint venture with IDBI Bank, IFFCO, Nabard and REC, the exchange has started trading in 11 contracts across nine commodities - gold, silver, crude oil, chana, RSS4 rubber, mustard, soyabean, refined soya oil and turmeric.

In order to attract volumes, the exchange will charge a fee of Re 1 for every transaction totalling Rs 1 lakh for the first three months. However, it has fixed a four-slab fee structure based on the turnover.As an inaugural offer, trading and clearing member are charged a concession membership fee of Rs 2.5 lakh against Rs 5 lakh, while a trading member have to shell out Rs 1 lakh against regular charge of Rs 1.5 lakh. The exchange will also be available on the commonly used ODIN trading platform.

?


View the original article here

Sunday, April 28, 2013

Gold plunge impacts short term peak in Gold Silver ratio

About four years ago the ratio hit a long term peak of 83.7, with the low in early 2011 at 31.7.

LONDON(BullionStreet): While Gold prices plunged recently, the ratio between the gold and silver price hits short terms peak.

Analysts said recent extreme volatility in the precious metals markets has impacted the ratio which means the two metals are changing value at different speeds than the historical norm.

Take for example the 24 hour gold-silver ratio, which is trading at around 58.7, which is off the lows of 58.2 from a few hours earlier, but well off the 59.6 peak where is was placed just less than one day ago.

Spot gold is currently trading at around $1376 an ounce, with silver $23.40 an ounce.

Viewed over the short term of the past 60 days, the current ratio levels is at higher end with the peak over this period at around the 59.6 (the low is 53.7) highlighting that the price of gold has recently been outpacing that of silver, or in another way silver has been falling at a faster rate.

About four years ago the ratio hit a long term peak of 83.7, with the low in early 2011 at 31.7.


View the original article here

UCX, India's sixth commodity exchange goes live, introduces Gold, Silver contracts

In precious metals, it has introudced Gold l kg May, July, September and November 2013 contracts and Gold Nano 100 gm, June, July, August, September, October, November and December contracts. Silver 30 kg contract for delivery in June August , November and Silver Nano contracts for June, July, August, September, October, November and December were introduced at launch of the exchange.



MUMBAI (Bullion Street): The Universal Commodity Exchange, the national level electronic commodity exchange in India,has gone live from Friday 19th April, 2013.


In precious metals, it has introudced Gold l kg May, July, September and November 2013 contracts and Gold Nano 100 gm, June, July, August, September, October, November and December contracts. Silver 30 kg contract for delivery in June August , November and Silver Nano contracts for June, July, August, September, October, November and December were introduced at launch of the exchange.?


Promoted by Commex Technology in joint venture with IDBI Bank, IFFCO, Nabard and REC, the exchange has started trading in 11 contracts across nine commodities - gold, silver, crude oil, chana, RSS4 rubber, mustard, soyabean, refined soya oil and turmeric.


In order to attract volumes, the exchange will charge a fee of Re 1 for every transaction totalling Rs 1 lakh for the first three months. However, it has fixed a four-slab fee structure based on the turnover.As an inaugural offer, trading and clearing member are charged a concession membership fee of Rs 2.5 lakh against Rs 5 lakh, while a trading member have to shell out Rs 1 lakh against regular charge of Rs 1.5 lakh. The exchange will also be available on the commonly used ODIN trading platform.


?


View the original article here

Gold, Silver sell offs been here before but this time is different

This time, physical demand had been surging just before paper price declines led by the manipulated futures market. Also, hedge funds have also been piling in to short the market to a historic degree based on the negative technical picture.

LONDON(BullionStreet): The precious metals have seen dramatic sell-offs before, although the primary difference between previous precious metal declines and the recent drop is the current shortage of physical metal.

It is also worth considering how well the commercial bullion traders are positioned for a rally after these past two days of sharply dropping prices, especially when the latest price drop came on top of a physical market signalling tightness all along.

Major dealers in North America and the EU seem to be out of physical precious metal stock almost across the board. This physical shortage had been developing for some time, in contrast to the 2008 drop.

In terms of the supply fundamentals, the loss of Kennecott’s Bingham Canyon mine last week, in addition to further postponements for Barrick Gold’s big Pascua Lama Project were as bullish as can be.

Goldman was also openly signaling the rest of the market by notably revising their gold price forecast lower just ahead of the big down move, followed by more major banks revising their price forecasts lower.

Precious metal prices have now been falling overall or range bound for almost two years. Contrast the current situation with the historical September 2010 to April 2011 period, when 30 percent down moves occurred after a short covering rally as a speculative pile-on ensued.

This time, physical demand had been surging just before paper price declines led by the manipulated futures market. Also, hedge funds have also been piling in to short the market to a historic degree based on the negative technical picture.

In contrast, J. P. Morgan Chase et al have been slowly exiting or reducing their notable precious metal short position over the last month without a drop in the market’s open interest. Normally, heavy downside direction in price tends to be accompanied by a reduction in open interest.

Frankly, the most recent selloff seems like just an orchestrated opportunity for the big shorts to cover.

Record highs in equities have been seen recently, despite persistently soft economic data that misses one week after another virtually across the board. Complacency and universal bullishness seem to prevail, despite data indicating that little if any real economic recovery is actually underway.

Another notable occurrence has been the persistent referencing of CPI and employment numbers by authorities and the mainstream media, despite the obvious disconnect of this data from the reality faced by most people.

The last straw was the blatant early release of FOMC Meeting Minutes so that the markets could react when precious metal sentiment was already horrible. According to the latest FOMC Minutes, money creation via asset purchases by the Fed seems likely to subside later this year. Furthermore, London seems to be anticipating that Mark Carney's arrival at the Bank of England will see a more activist monetary policy stance arise in the UK too.

Nevertheless, the world's stock of fiat money is not contracting - quite the opposite, in fact. Japan has just launched another round of monetary stimulus on steroids, which will see the developed world's most indebted economy create a proposed $1.4 trillion in Yen in a bid to break the country free from depression and the perceived threat of deflation.

Once again, the same price pattern seems to be emerging. A massive dump in early overnight trading, followed by a margin increase pulls the rug out from under precious metals support as the market approaches key technical levels.

The panic selling feeds on itself as stops are triggered. The market moves much farther down than statistical or historical norms would suggest seems probable. This latest sharp decline, led by the Asian session, resulted in the biggest two day decline in the price of gold seen over the past thirty years.

From a technical perspective, the sharp move down seen a few days ago broke below the 38.2 percent retracement level of the big post-2008 gold rally from 681.40 to 1920.75, prompting traders to shoot for the 50 percent retracement level at 1301.07.

This 50 percent Fibo level now seems to offer the market both a target and a rallying point to buy gold ahead of. The substantial bounce already seen from the recent 1321.09 low just ahead of this objective indicates that the market’s desire to sell may well already have been satisfied.

Interestingly, it often seems to be the case that when market sentiment is apparently beyond repair, the seeds for a new rally are quietly being sown.
Courtesy: Silver Coin Investor


View the original article here

UCX, India's sixth commodity exchange goes live, introduces Gold, Silver contracts

In precious metals, it has introudced Gold l kg May, July, September and November 2013 contracts and Gold Nano 100 gm, June, July, August, September, October, November and December contracts. Silver 30 kg contract for delivery in June August , November and Silver Nano contracts for June, July, August, September, October, November and December were introduced at launch of the exchange.

MUMBAI (Bullion Street): The Universal Commodity Exchange, the national level electronic commodity exchange in India,has gone live from Friday 19th April, 2013.

In precious metals, it has introudced Gold l kg May, July, September and November 2013 contracts and Gold Nano 100 gm, June, July, August, September, October, November and December contracts. Silver 30 kg contract for delivery in June August , November and Silver Nano contracts for June, July, August, September, October, November and December were introduced at launch of the exchange.?

Promoted by Commex Technology in joint venture with IDBI Bank, IFFCO, Nabard and REC, the exchange has started trading in 11 contracts across nine commodities - gold, silver, crude oil, chana, RSS4 rubber, mustard, soyabean, refined soya oil and turmeric.

In order to attract volumes, the exchange will charge a fee of Re 1 for every transaction totalling Rs 1 lakh for the first three months. However, it has fixed a four-slab fee structure based on the turnover.As an inaugural offer, trading and clearing member are charged a concession membership fee of Rs 2.5 lakh against Rs 5 lakh, while a trading member have to shell out Rs 1 lakh against regular charge of Rs 1.5 lakh. The exchange will also be available on the commonly used ODIN trading platform.

?


View the original article here

Saturday, April 27, 2013

Fresnillo remains committed to Silver

The FTSE 100-listed mining company said it's gold production decreased by 3.5 per cent year-on-year while silver performed better and increased by 2.6 per cent.

MEXICO CITY(BullionStreet): Mexico's Fresnillo announced an increase in silver and gold production for the quarter ended 31 March 2013.

The FTSE 100-listed mining company said it's gold production decreased by 3.5 per cent year-on-year while silver performed better and increased by 2.6 per cent.

The company also said it is evaluating cost-saving initiatives after the recent market slump in silver and gold prices.

A year ago Fresnillo, the world’s biggest primary producer of silver, was enjoying the impact of silver’s strong run.

However the company said it remains committed to its long-term goals of producing 68 million troy ounces of silver and 500,000 ounces of gold a year by 2018, but will do so with a view to maximizing benefits for all our stakeholders.

The company also confirmed that it remains on track to achieve this year's production target of 41 million ounces of silver in 2013, broadly flat on year, once the 4 million ounces from the Silverstream contract is taken into account.

Fresnillo is also targeting a 3.6% rise in gold output to 490,000 ounces this year as the company's Noche Buena mine continues to ramp up production.

Fresnillo's shares are down 42% since the beginning of the year, closing at 1074 pence a share on Wednesday.


View the original article here

Gold, Silver sell offs been here before but this time is different

This time, physical demand had been surging just before paper price declines led by the manipulated futures market. Also, hedge funds have also been piling in to short the market to a historic degree based on the negative technical picture.

LONDON(BullionStreet): The precious metals have seen dramatic sell-offs before, although the primary difference between previous precious metal declines and the recent drop is the current shortage of physical metal.

It is also worth considering how well the commercial bullion traders are positioned for a rally after these past two days of sharply dropping prices, especially when the latest price drop came on top of a physical market signalling tightness all along.

Major dealers in North America and the EU seem to be out of physical precious metal stock almost across the board. This physical shortage had been developing for some time, in contrast to the 2008 drop.

In terms of the supply fundamentals, the loss of Kennecott’s Bingham Canyon mine last week, in addition to further postponements for Barrick Gold’s big Pascua Lama Project were as bullish as can be.

Goldman was also openly signaling the rest of the market by notably revising their gold price forecast lower just ahead of the big down move, followed by more major banks revising their price forecasts lower.

Precious metal prices have now been falling overall or range bound for almost two years. Contrast the current situation with the historical September 2010 to April 2011 period, when 30 percent down moves occurred after a short covering rally as a speculative pile-on ensued.

This time, physical demand had been surging just before paper price declines led by the manipulated futures market. Also, hedge funds have also been piling in to short the market to a historic degree based on the negative technical picture.

In contrast, J. P. Morgan Chase et al have been slowly exiting or reducing their notable precious metal short position over the last month without a drop in the market’s open interest. Normally, heavy downside direction in price tends to be accompanied by a reduction in open interest.

Frankly, the most recent selloff seems like just an orchestrated opportunity for the big shorts to cover.

Record highs in equities have been seen recently, despite persistently soft economic data that misses one week after another virtually across the board. Complacency and universal bullishness seem to prevail, despite data indicating that little if any real economic recovery is actually underway.

Another notable occurrence has been the persistent referencing of CPI and employment numbers by authorities and the mainstream media, despite the obvious disconnect of this data from the reality faced by most people.

The last straw was the blatant early release of FOMC Meeting Minutes so that the markets could react when precious metal sentiment was already horrible. According to the latest FOMC Minutes, money creation via asset purchases by the Fed seems likely to subside later this year. Furthermore, London seems to be anticipating that Mark Carney's arrival at the Bank of England will see a more activist monetary policy stance arise in the UK too.

Nevertheless, the world's stock of fiat money is not contracting - quite the opposite, in fact. Japan has just launched another round of monetary stimulus on steroids, which will see the developed world's most indebted economy create a proposed $1.4 trillion in Yen in a bid to break the country free from depression and the perceived threat of deflation.

Once again, the same price pattern seems to be emerging. A massive dump in early overnight trading, followed by a margin increase pulls the rug out from under precious metals support as the market approaches key technical levels.

The panic selling feeds on itself as stops are triggered. The market moves much farther down than statistical or historical norms would suggest seems probable. This latest sharp decline, led by the Asian session, resulted in the biggest two day decline in the price of gold seen over the past thirty years.

From a technical perspective, the sharp move down seen a few days ago broke below the 38.2 percent retracement level of the big post-2008 gold rally from 681.40 to 1920.75, prompting traders to shoot for the 50 percent retracement level at 1301.07.

This 50 percent Fibo level now seems to offer the market both a target and a rallying point to buy gold ahead of. The substantial bounce already seen from the recent 1321.09 low just ahead of this objective indicates that the market’s desire to sell may well already have been satisfied.

Interestingly, it often seems to be the case that when market sentiment is apparently beyond repair, the seeds for a new rally are quietly being sown.
Courtesy: Silver Coin Investor


View the original article here

Friday, April 26, 2013

Silver bottoms out, but looks poised for recovery

Traders were more active in mini contracts that the standard contracts due to the uncertainty prevailing in the market, analysts said. Low volumes and fall in open interest in COmex silver portends weakness to continue for some more time in silver. Silver is also not likely to get any support from the base metals complex which also remains weak due to weak

NEWYORK/ MUMBAI (Bullion Street): US silver futures seems to have bottomed out at $22 per ounce levels and looks poised for some upward moves although volume and open interest has dropped signficantly over the past week. At India's Multi Commodity Exchange, Silver May contract is o.64% at Rs 43693 per kg on Monday afternoon trade.

" On daily charts both Comex silver and MCX silver seems to have bottomed out and looking for a push upwards although recovery signs are weak," Sreekumar Raghavan, Investment Strategist at Commodity Online Group said. Prices are still below the 20 day SMA of Rs 47635.40 at MCX while RSI of 19.76 is extremely bearish and still in oversold territory, he added.

Traders were more active in mini contracts that the standard contracts due to the uncertainty prevailing in the market, analysts said. Low volumes and fall in open interest in COmex silver portends weakness to continue for some more time in silver. Silver is also not likely to get any support from the base metals complex which also remains weak due to weak China GDP data although better US Q1 GDP data due on Friday 26 April and Japan's monetary accomodation and likely ECB rate cuts may help push silver prices higher, analysts added.

Next major resistance for Comex silver is seen at $26 while support is seen near term at $22.75 and RSI of 24.42 is still bearish oversold territory, Sreekumar Raghavan added.

"The sharp fall in the prices of gold and silver may have stemmed from the shift in market sentiment towards precious metals. The minutes of the previous FOMC meeting, the decision of BOJ to augment its asset purchase program, the weak economic data on China may have also contributed to the tumble in gold and silver prices. Following such a sharp drop in prices, a correction might occur that will pull up gold and silver. But as the week will progress, if the current bearish market sentiment towards precious metals will persist, gold and silver are likely to resume their downward trend," according to a market review published in Seeking Alpha.


View the original article here

Thursday, April 25, 2013

Gold, Silver and the currency chronicles

The big shorts in the precious metals markets have acted as the governor, preventing the true expression of the paper currency value of real money for decades.

LONDON(BullionStreet): The Forex market may actually be seeing the beginning of the crack up boom where traditional currencies like silver and gold will naturally reassert themselves just as world monetary expansion begins to truly accelerate.

The big shorts in the precious metals markets have acted as the governor, preventing the true expression of the paper currency value of real money for decades.

It seems to be no coincidence that their market dominance was enabled in large part by the luxury of interested parties enjoying cheap access to the world’s main reserve currency.

It seems relevant to review some of the recent historical events and circumstances that have brought the currency market to its present tenuous state.

The first factor to consider is the credit bust. For too many years, going back to the 1990’s, the Fed’s and other major central banks’ policies have incentivized leveraged speculation. This has fostered a massive inflation in the global pool of speculative finance that created situation where too much market-based liquidity or “money” has been chasing too few risk assets.

The second factor is the massive rise in monetary stimulus programs. One result of these huge quantitative easing and bailout packages is that unprecedented monetary creation is largely bypassing real economies on its way to creating bubbles in global securities markets.

The third factor is the realty of unbalanced government budgets. The recent U.S. government budget released showed an increase in spending, as the much-publicized debt ceiling limit is repeatedly increased and adherence to it postponed. Nevertheless, that ceiling was an important - albeit probably symbolic - gesture that telegraphed to the rest of the world there would be some limits to the huge debt already accumulated by the United States.

Finally, the recent banking crisis in Cyprus has provided the world with a template for the first direct bail-in, where bank investors and depositors help pay for its failure to operate in a commercially viable manner.

Japan recently announced further radical stimulus measures to help stimulate its flagging economy. This increasing trend toward boosting the Japanese money supply has resulted in a sharply weaker Yen, which has declined from a historic high of 75.55 Yen to the Dollar seen in October 2011 to a recent high of 99.94 touched on April 11th of this year.

Another remarkable event has been the parabolic rise in Bitcoin observed over the last few years, only to see the electronic currency crash hard in extremely volatile recent trading. The crash came in the wake of some recent Denial of Service attacks on Bitcoin’s primary dealing website Mt. Gox that handles roughly 80 percent of its market.

The prices of gold and silver have also been hit hard enough to break a key 38.2 percent Fibonacci retracement level that in turn provoked further technical selling. The sharp sell-off in the precious metals has conveniently allowed J.P. Morgan Chase to exit some of its concentrated short positions.

Basically, the world's stock of fiat money is not contracting - quite the opposite, in fact. Japan has just launched its ‘stimulus on steroids plan’, which will see the developed world's most indebted economy create a proposed $1.4 trillion in Yen in a bid to break its economy free from depression and the questionable risk of deflation.

Nor is money creation in the West likely to subside, although earlier this month, the FOMC did hint that it might reduce its asset purchases later this year and that the committee was divided on the risks of continued super easy monetary policy.

Furthermore, current Bank of Canada governor Mark Carney's departure to head the Bank of England is expected to result in a trend toward more activist monetary policy in the UK too.

On the world’s forex market, recent weakness in the commodity currencies like the Australian, Canadian and New Zealand Dollars has been noted in the wake of the remarkable sell-off in the precious metals seen over the past week.

These currency moves tend to highlight recent U.S. Dollar strength, more so than being a reflection of the recent commodity downdraft. Nevertheless, recent events may actually represent the last gasp of King Dollar, as inflationary U.S. monetary and budgetary policies continue to chip away at the value foundation of the world’s primary reserve currency.

Precious metals now appear to have found good support, with retail physical sales reportedly booming at the lower prices, despite heavy downward pressure exerted on the paper futures markets.

The use of barter also seems to be increasing in popularity as a method of value exchange, as people turn away from fiat currencies in droves. In addition, the recent out in Bitcoin prices, has drawn considerable media attention to the use of that electronic currency as an alternative medium of exchange to fiat currency.

Falling commodity prices are simply another indication of failed policy that could well set the stage for a further acceleration in monetary expansion.

Speculative excess today encompasses all markets, with big money piled up on both the long and short sides of the financial markets.
Ultimately, it is the large shorts who seem to trigger the sell-offs in the commodities like silver and gold, probably so that they can cover their positions profitably.
Courtesy: Silver Coin Investor


View the original article here

What just happened to Silver prices

Things really ripened with the entrance of the hedge funds. These large speculators had become short the market in waves over the last few weeks for the first time in seven years in silver and in even longer for gold.

LONDON(BullionStreet): Both gold and silver experienced historic sell offs during the last few trading sessions. Although market commentary and analyst opinions have been varied, very few outside of the precious metals community have come close to discerning the reality of this move.

Without a working knowledge of price discovery, most people will fail to grasp the meaning of what just happened.

To begin with, the key is to always focus on the origin of this move. Where and how the selling originated is what matters most. Outside market forces and technical indicators may seem to fit and support the move, but remember that all commodity markets with pricing dominated by derivatives have now diverged from anything resembling a natural trading structure.

In the precious metals market, the usual dominant players consist of one or two large entities who maintain exaggerated and naked short positions. They dropped a huge selling bomb into the CME pits last Friday that got the sell-off ball rolling, and the price went down on huge trading volume as stops were triggered and new selling interest emerged. Subsequently, prices have now moved below just about every key moving average.

The latest move is largely a result of panic selling and follow through liquidation triggered by margin calls. Nevertheless, as many gold and silver investors know, these moves are initiated via electronic or high-frequency trading programs, and they have nothing to do with real supply and demand.

In fact, this type of computerized trading now dominates every electronic market, and by some accounts,it is responsible for upwards of 70 percent of all trading activity, including that seen in the equity markets.

Open interest in silver was at record levels for an unprecedented period of time. This was unusual because it occurred during a time when silver had been correcting generally lower after having reached a historic peak in 2011. Normally, open interest falls with prices as speculators sell out their positions.

Things really ripened with the entrance of the hedge funds. These large speculators had become short the market in waves over the last few weeks for the first time in seven years in silver and in even longer for gold.

Typically, any hedge funds pile in on momentum. This often makes them the last to arrive on a move and the first to bolt and cover their positions.

As long time silver analyst Ted Butler pointed out on Monday, this move probably allowed the big silver shorts to cover the majority, if not all, of their trapped short positions. Obviously it is illegal and immoral to use big positions like this to influence price, but if this is indeed the case, then the market has just been cleansed of at least some of this very uneconomic position so that things could now be set up for a move upward of similar magnitude. The upcoming COT report will clarify this positional situation considerably.

The entire dramatic move down could be about that short-covering and nothing else. Obviously, this is about as far from how natural markets should operate as one could go.

Meanwhile, the mainstream financial press remained focused on Goldman Sachs's recent call for gold in the 1200's, the Cypriot "gold-selling rumor" perhaps justifying further gold liquidation from the rest of the EU periphery, and news that the FOMC’s minutes indicated the Fed may be stepping back from asset purchases later this year as catalysts for this dramatic sell-off in the precious metals.

Nevertheless, Goldman Sachs is notorious for talking their book (or the reverse of it) in order to get their customers to do what they want and help them out of nasty positions.

Regarding the Cyprus reasoning, it would be quite a stretch to assume that any of that gold would ever reach the market, especially given the demonstrated record buying levels of the developing world's central banks that desperately need to build hard currency reserves of their own.

Of course, it seems as if the world forgot that the Cyprus template included the confiscation of bank accounts, which in addition to official policy and historic central bank balance sheet expansion via competitive currency devaluation, could be the most bullish reason for moving money out of the fiat currency system and into alternative hard assets like silver and gold that people have seen in modern times.

Basically, speculation about this move outside of the actual trading mechanism is not useful. Furthermore, stepping back a little closer to the underlying positioning issue, one might ask whether the big shorts were actually being pressured or forced to make this move by the CFTC.

Perhaps an orchestrated move like this was the only way these bullion banks could get out from under these dangerous positions? The heterogeneous longs in silver had been standing strong and were a real threat to triggering a short covering panic. They presented a clear sign to the authorities and the concentrated shorts that the decades-long silver price manipulation could not go on forever.

Given how poor sentiment has been, and the general ignorance about what is happening in silver from a macro-economic perspective, it is not hard to envision the price of silver running through $100 very quickly and without even creating a U.S. Dollar panic. In fact, the Dollar could even remain "strong" given what is happening in Japan and Europe.

Of course, the mainstream media will be flashing this week's chart each and every time silver moves up in any significant way, proclaiming legitimate and fundamentally justifiable price rises to be ‘just another bubble’ as they always have.

In the end, the only real market for these metals is the physical market, since futures prices can be manipulated by those who can create money or borrow it very cheaply. Indeed, the precious metals are one of the last remaining markets with a pricing mechanism dominated by paper derivatives, when the commodities themselves are based on a physical unit end point.

Most long term silver investors already understand this situation, in addition to the fact that multiple claims exist for each and every above and below ground ounce of these metals.
Courtesy: Silver Coin Investor


View the original article here

Gold crash : CME hikes collateral to Gold, Silver Futures

Collateral, or margin, to trade benchmark Comex 100-troy-ounce gold futures will be increased by 19%, and the margin to trade silver will rise 18%.

CHICAGO(BullionStreet): The CME Group Inc, parent company of the main metals and energy exchanges in the United States, raised the collateral requirements for trading in benchmark gold, silver and other precious-metals futures contracts.

Collateral, or margin, to trade benchmark Comex 100-troy-ounce gold futures will be increased by 19%, and the margin to trade silver will rise 18%.

Analysts said savage sell off by traders due to crash in gold and silver prices prompted the exchange operator to increase the amount of money investors need to trade gold contracts.

The CME also raised the margin to trade palladium by 14%, and for platinum by 19%.

Margin increases tend to be implemented during times of market turbulence.The increases are effective at the close of business Tuesday.


View the original article here

Wednesday, April 24, 2013

Gold, Silver and the currency chronicles

The big shorts in the precious metals markets have acted as the governor, preventing the true expression of the paper currency value of real money for decades.

LONDON(BullionStreet): The Forex market may actually be seeing the beginning of the crack up boom where traditional currencies like silver and gold will naturally reassert themselves just as world monetary expansion begins to truly accelerate.

The big shorts in the precious metals markets have acted as the governor, preventing the true expression of the paper currency value of real money for decades.

It seems to be no coincidence that their market dominance was enabled in large part by the luxury of interested parties enjoying cheap access to the world’s main reserve currency.

It seems relevant to review some of the recent historical events and circumstances that have brought the currency market to its present tenuous state.

The first factor to consider is the credit bust. For too many years, going back to the 1990’s, the Fed’s and other major central banks’ policies have incentivized leveraged speculation. This has fostered a massive inflation in the global pool of speculative finance that created situation where too much market-based liquidity or “money” has been chasing too few risk assets.

The second factor is the massive rise in monetary stimulus programs. One result of these huge quantitative easing and bailout packages is that unprecedented monetary creation is largely bypassing real economies on its way to creating bubbles in global securities markets.

The third factor is the realty of unbalanced government budgets. The recent U.S. government budget released showed an increase in spending, as the much-publicized debt ceiling limit is repeatedly increased and adherence to it postponed. Nevertheless, that ceiling was an important - albeit probably symbolic - gesture that telegraphed to the rest of the world there would be some limits to the huge debt already accumulated by the United States.

Finally, the recent banking crisis in Cyprus has provided the world with a template for the first direct bail-in, where bank investors and depositors help pay for its failure to operate in a commercially viable manner.

Japan recently announced further radical stimulus measures to help stimulate its flagging economy. This increasing trend toward boosting the Japanese money supply has resulted in a sharply weaker Yen, which has declined from a historic high of 75.55 Yen to the Dollar seen in October 2011 to a recent high of 99.94 touched on April 11th of this year.

Another remarkable event has been the parabolic rise in Bitcoin observed over the last few years, only to see the electronic currency crash hard in extremely volatile recent trading. The crash came in the wake of some recent Denial of Service attacks on Bitcoin’s primary dealing website Mt. Gox that handles roughly 80 percent of its market.

The prices of gold and silver have also been hit hard enough to break a key 38.2 percent Fibonacci retracement level that in turn provoked further technical selling. The sharp sell-off in the precious metals has conveniently allowed J.P. Morgan Chase to exit some of its concentrated short positions.

Basically, the world's stock of fiat money is not contracting - quite the opposite, in fact. Japan has just launched its ‘stimulus on steroids plan’, which will see the developed world's most indebted economy create a proposed $1.4 trillion in Yen in a bid to break its economy free from depression and the questionable risk of deflation.

Nor is money creation in the West likely to subside, although earlier this month, the FOMC did hint that it might reduce its asset purchases later this year and that the committee was divided on the risks of continued super easy monetary policy.

Furthermore, current Bank of Canada governor Mark Carney's departure to head the Bank of England is expected to result in a trend toward more activist monetary policy in the UK too.

On the world’s forex market, recent weakness in the commodity currencies like the Australian, Canadian and New Zealand Dollars has been noted in the wake of the remarkable sell-off in the precious metals seen over the past week.

These currency moves tend to highlight recent U.S. Dollar strength, more so than being a reflection of the recent commodity downdraft. Nevertheless, recent events may actually represent the last gasp of King Dollar, as inflationary U.S. monetary and budgetary policies continue to chip away at the value foundation of the world’s primary reserve currency.

Precious metals now appear to have found good support, with retail physical sales reportedly booming at the lower prices, despite heavy downward pressure exerted on the paper futures markets.

The use of barter also seems to be increasing in popularity as a method of value exchange, as people turn away from fiat currencies in droves. In addition, the recent out in Bitcoin prices, has drawn considerable media attention to the use of that electronic currency as an alternative medium of exchange to fiat currency.

Falling commodity prices are simply another indication of failed policy that could well set the stage for a further acceleration in monetary expansion.

Speculative excess today encompasses all markets, with big money piled up on both the long and short sides of the financial markets.
Ultimately, it is the large shorts who seem to trigger the sell-offs in the commodities like silver and gold, probably so that they can cover their positions profitably.
Courtesy: Silver Coin Investor


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Arian Silver shares crash 30%, company says fall not justified

The company siad in press release that it has noted the recent decline in the Company's share price. However, it said that the Board of Directors reaffirm that the fundamentals for silver and the investment opportunity for Arian Silver have not changed in the short-term.

LONDON (Bullion Street): Arian Silver Corporation (TSXV: AGQ) (AIM: AGQ) (FRANKFURT: I3A), a silver exploration, development and production company with a focus on projects in the Zacatecas silver belt of Mexico, has witnessed its share price fall sharply b 30% from $11 as the beginning of the month to $7.62 last Friday.

The company said in ?press release that it has noted the recent decline in the Company's share price. However, it said that the Board of Directors reaffirm that the fundamentals for silver and the investment opportunity for Arian Silver have not changed in the short-term.

Demand for silver as an industrial component is sustained and the Company's 15 March 2013 statement regarding the intended acquisition of a processing plant with a capacity of up to 1,500 tonnes per day of silver-lead-zinc ore is a significant milestone for the Company.

The Company confirms financing talks are continuing in line with expectations and there has been no significant development in this regard to justify any share price movement.


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