Gold and Silver • Dumb money goes short silver, smart money unloads its shorts
Gold and Silver Disaggregated COT Report (DCOT) for April 5
Dumb money goes short silver, smart money unloads its shorts, GGR says
http://www.gotgoldreport.com/2013/04/go … ril-5.html
This week shows an important and dramatic change in the silver futures positioning.
HOUSTON — This week’s Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) disaggregated commitments of traders (DCOT) report was released at 15:30 ET Friday. Our recap of the changes in weekly positioning by the disaggregated trader classes, as compiled by the CFTC, is just below.
Update 1: Adds charts for gold and silver short positioning by Managed Money traders.
This week shows an important and dramatic change in the silver futures positioning.
Note: Spec Funds (Managed Money) have become net short silver futures as of this report. Note also the extremely low net short positioning of the Producer/Merchants for gold. The Producer Merchants, the category which includes bullion banks, have not had so few bets that gold would fall in price since the 2008 panic. That is the same thing as saying that the large commercial traders are currently the least fearful that gold prices will fall further since December 9, 2008, when they then held just 80,669 contracts net short with gold then near $776 the ounce.
20130405 DCOT
(DCOT Table for April 5, for data as of the close on Tuesday, April 2. Source CFTC for COT data, Cash Market for gold and silver.) (More…)
In the DCOT table above a net short position shows as a negative figure in red. A net long position shows in black. In the Change column, a negative number indicates either an increase to an existing net short position or a reduction of a net long position. A black figure in the Change column indicates an increase to an existing long position or a reduction of an existing net short position. The way to think of it is that black figures in the Change column are traders getting “longer” and red figures are traders getting less long or shorter.
All of the trader’s positions are calculated net of spreading contracts as of the Tuesday disaggregated COT report.
Spec Funds Record High Short Position for Silver
If there is one particular chart of the many we review each week that we might want to call attention to, it would have to be the chart below – the gross short positioning of traders classed by the CFTC as Managed Money, aka the Spec Funds.
20130405 MM Silver Shorts
Managed Money Net Short Silver Futures for First Time in over Five Years
Because of that extremely high Managed Money silver short position, collectively the Spec Funds showed their largest ever net short, repeat net short position for silver futures since the inception of the CFTC disaggregated commitments of traders reports (data begins in 2006). As of April 2, with silver then showing a last trade of $27.26, Managed Money traders reported a net short position of 2,497 lots as shown in the chart below.
20130405 MM Silver Net
Managed Money traders have been net short silver futures before, for one reporting week on September 4, 2007, when they reported being 92 contracts net short with silver then changing hands at $12.09 an ounce. Two months later, silver had tested $15. Six months later, in March of 2008 silver had cleared $20 – just before the 2008 panic took control of the markets.
Managed Money Near Record High Short Gold Futures
Perhaps as a "runner up" we might point to the chart below as important and noteworthy – the gross short positioning of Managed Money traders in gold futures as of Tuesday.
20130405 MM Gold Shorts
The Managed Money short positioning charts for gold and silver have something very much in common, in terms of what they represent.
Statistics: Posted by DIGGER DAN — Sun Apr 07, 2013 2:24 pm
View full post on opinions.caduceusx.com
Other • Not So Smart
By James Howard Kunstler
on February 25, 2013 9:34 AM
"The Fed can afford to lose money because it can simply print more."
–The New York Times
One striking but little discussed element about the new Netflix Washington political drama series, House of Cards, is that every time a character picks up a cell phone, something bad happens. The character’s phones shadow them at every turn like evil twins, giving the impression that the US government, and everything in its orbit, is run not by human beings but by cell phones. The people attached are merely puppets of the phones.
I don’t think this is a sign of the rumored "singularity," the point at which human and machine intelligence supposedly meld into a shimmering synthesis of silicon masturbation fantasies. Rather it’s just another demonstration of the diminishing returns of technology — or how thinking you’re so smart actually makes you stupider. Surely we are a stupider nation politically than we were before the age of texting, drones, and high frequency trading.
I have no predictions about what exact effects the so-called Sequester might bring about when its dreaded hammer rings down on Friday. But something that works as a bitch-slap upside this nation’s tattooed head is apt to be salutary, if only to demonstrate to the apathetic masses and its grifter leaders that anything which can’t go on forever, eventually won’t.
What disturbs me, a non-right-winger politically, is that the US government should not try to replace a functioning real economy of volitional exchanges. That is what our government has been attempting by stealthy increments for decades and now with reckless abandon in the new era of a permanent contraction that no political figure can fathom. Lately, this trend has been ramped up under the wishful hypothesis that some magical new technology or financial "secret sauce," will eventually bring back a return to the nirvana of techno-industrial boom times, if only we can be "smart" enough. The wishing is evident in such con-jobs as the shale gas bubble ("We’ll soon be energy independent") and the idea that a few new Apple fabrication factories, staffed largely by robots, will save the remnant American blue collar class from their fate as tattooed convenience store layabouts.
Of course there is plenty of real work to do around the USA in transitioning to the next phase of history, but we’re not interested because it might violate our narrow comfort zone. We need more people to start working at local farming. When agri-biz fails it will happen hard and fast because of its seasonal nature, and the familiar distribution networks (supermarkets) will fail with it. American political leadership won’t inform its citizen-subjects about this beforehand, or shift policy supports away from their ag-industrial client-patrons. To be fair, American citizens can’t see themselves working in the crop rows, either. They will choose to starve rather than do what they’ve seen Mexican migrants do for a couple of generations — and they will starve, eventually, too, even with The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills playing on the flat screen in the background.
If we weren’t such a stupid people in thrall to our "smart" phones, we’d be rebuilding the US passenger railroad system for the day, not far off, when the grand entitlement of Happy Motoring rather suddenly vaporizes for a significant chunk of the population. The lack of interest in that project is really something to behold. Politicians who systematically "de-fund" the rail corridors, which is the case here in the Northeast, do it because they are as clueless as their constituents about what’s really coming down. Rather, both the politicians and the public place their bets on "self-driving cars" powered by an as-yet-to-be announced sovereign replacement for liquid hydrocarbon fuel. The net effect of that stupidity is that your children and grandchildren will lead lives in which they rarely travel more than ten miles from home.
What also gets me about the aptly-named tele-drama House of Cards is the way all the leading politician characters are seamlessly conveyed around Washington D.C. by chauffeured limousines, even two-bit congressmen from states where people don’t eat with knives and forks. Cossetted in their air-cooled back seats, they relentlessly romance their smart phones, making more trouble for themselves and for everyone in this sad-ass feckless country. What a tragic conceit for the nation of dunces we have actually made of ourselves.
http://kunstler.com/blog/2013/02/not-so-smart.html
Statistics: Posted by yoda — Mon Feb 25, 2013 8:39 am
View full post on opinions.caduceusx.com
International News • 25 Signs That The Smart Money Has Completely Written Off ..
25 Signs That The Smart Money Has Completely Written Off Southern Europe
When it comes to the financial world, it is important to listen to what the "smart money" is saying, but it is much more important to watch what the "smart money" is actually doing. The ultra-wealthy and those that run the biggest financial institutions on the planet are far more "connected" to what is really going on in financial circles behind the scenes than you and I could ever hope to be. But if we watch their behavior we can get clues as to what they think is about to happen. As is the case with so many other things, if you want to figure out what is really going on in Europe, just follow the money. And right now, money is rapidly flowing out of southern Europe and into northern Europe. In fact, some large corporations are now pulling the money that they make in Greece during the day out of the country every single night. It is becoming increasingly clear that the upper crust of the financial world considers a Greek exit from the euro to be "inevitable" and that it also considers much of the rest of southern Europe to be a lost cause. Unfortunately, a financial collapse across southern Europe is also likely to trigger another devastating global recession.
Even though all the warning signs were there, very few people actually expected to see the kind of financial crisis that we saw back in 2008.
But it happened.
Now very few people actually expect another "Lehman Brothers moment" to happen in Europe although the warning signs are all around us.
Sadly, most people never want to believe the truth until it is too late.
The following are 25 signs that the smart money has completely written off southern Europe….
#1 Lloyd’s of London is publicly admitting that it is rapidly making preparations for a collapse of the eurozone.
#2 According to the New York Times, top global law firms are advising their clients to withdraw all cash and all other liquid assets from Greece….
So their advice is blunt: Remove cash and other liquid assets from Greece and prepare to take a short-term hit on any other investments.
“My personal view is that it is irrational for anyone, whether a corporation or an individual, to be leaving money in Greek financial institutions, so long as there is a credible prospect of a euro zone exit,” said Ian M. Clark, a partner in London for White & Case, a global law firm that has a team of 10 lawyers focusing on the issue.
#3 According to CNBC, large numbers of wealthy Europeans have been moving their money from banks in southern Europe to banks in northern Europe….
Financial advisers and private bankers whose clients have accounts too large to be covered by a Europe-wide guarantee on deposits up to 100,000 euros ($125,000), are reporting a "bank run by wire transfer" that has picked up during May.
Much of this money has headed north to banks in London, Frankfurt and Geneva, financial advisers say.
"It’s been an ongoing process but it certainly picked up pace a couple of weeks ago We believe there is a continuous 2-3 year bank run by wire transfer," said Lorne Baring, managing director at B Capital, a Geneva-based pan European wealth management firm.
#4 The President of the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia, Charles Plosser, says that the Federal Reserve is advising money market funds to reduce their exposure to Europe….
The Fed and regulators have tried to stress to money market funds, for example, to reduce their exposure to European financial institutions.
#5 The yield on 10-year Spanish bonds is rapidly moving toward the very important 7 percent level.
#6 Many multinational corporations that operate in Greece are now pulling their funds out of the country on a nightly basis.
#7 Juergen Fitschen, the co-CEO of Deutsche Bank, has publicly proclaimed that Greece is a "failed state".
#8 The head of the Swiss central bank has admitted that Switzerland is developing an "action plan" for how it will handle the collapse of the eurozone.
#9 The European Commission has urged all member states to develop contingency plans for a Greek exit from the euro….
Last week, the European Commission said that it has asked member states to make plans to deal with a potential Greek exit, ahead of a second round of Greek elections on 17 June.
#10 PIMCO CEO Mohamed El-Erian says that a Greek exit from the euro "is probably inevitable".
#11 Spanish stocks continue to drop like a rock.
#12 The percentage of bad loans on the books of Spanish banks has reached an 18 year high.
#13 Late on Friday, the Spanish government announced that banking giant Bankia is going to need a 19 billion euro bailout.
#14 Standard & Poor’s downgraded the credit ratings of five more Spanish banks to junk status on Friday.
#15 Moody’s downgraded the credit ratings of 16 Spanish banks back on May 17th.
#16 According to the Telegraph, "struggling European banks could be seized and controlled by Brussels as part of secret plans being drawn up".
#17 The head of equity strategy at Societe Generale, Claudia Panseri, is warning that European stocks could fall by as much as 50 percent if Greece leaves the euro.
#18 Economist Marc Faber is warning that there is now a "100% chance" that there will be another global recession.
#19 There seems to be an increasing attempt to pin the problems that Greece is now experiencing on the behavior of Greek citizens. The following are some of the shocking things that the head of the IMF, Christine Lagarde, said in a recent interview….
"Do you know what? As far as Athens is concerned, I also think about all those people who are trying to escape tax all the time. All these people in Greece who are trying to escape tax."
Even more than she thinks about all those now struggling to survive without jobs or public services? "I think of them equally. And I think they should also help themselves collectively." How? "By all paying their tax. Yeah."
It sounds as if she’s essentially saying to the Greeks and others in Europe, you’ve had a nice time and now it’s payback time.
"That’s right." She nods calmly. "Yeah."
And what about their children, who can’t conceivably be held responsible? "Well, hey, parents are responsible, right? So parents have to pay their tax."
#20 According to the Telegraph, an unidentified member of Angela Merkel’s cabinet has stated that Germany simply will not "pour money into a bottomless pit".
#21 This week the Bank of England is holding a "secret summit" of global central bankers to address the European financial crisis….
The summit will be dominated by central bankers including the host, Sir Mervyn King, Governor of the Bank of England. Mario Draghi, president of the European Central Bank, and Zhou Xiaochuan, governor of the People’s Bank of China, have been invited.
#22 According to Zero Hedge, a major German newspaper is reporting that a Greek exit from the eurozone is a "done deal"….
"The Greece-exit is a done deal: According to the German economic news from financial circles EU and the ECB have abandoned the motherland of democracy as a euro member. The reason is, interestingly, not in the upcoming elections – these are basically become irrelevant. The EU has finally realized that the Greeks have not met any agreements and will not continue not to meet them. A banker: "We helped with the Toika. The help of the troika was tied to conditions. Greece has fulfilled none of the conditions, and has been for months now."
#23 According to CNBC, preparations are quietly being made to print up and distribute new drachmas should the need arise….
British banknote printer De La Rue is drawing up plans to print new drachma notes in the event of a Greek euro exit, according to an industry source with knowledge of the matter.
The world’s biggest security firm G4S expects to be involved in distributing notes around the country.
#24 Citibank’s chief economist Willem Buiter is warning that any new currency issued by the Greek government could "immediately fall by 60 percent".
#25 Reuters is reporting that a planning memo exists that suggests that Greece could receive as much as 50 billion euros to "ease its path" out of the eurozone.
If Greece does leave the eurozone, the cost to the rest of Europe is going to be astronomical. The following is from a recent article by John Mauldin….
The debate among very knowledgeable individuals and institutions as to the future of Europe is intense. There are those who argue that the cost of breaking up the eurozone, even allowing Greece to leave, is so high that it will not be permitted to happen. Estimates abound of a cost of €1 trillion to European banks, governments, and businesses, just for the exit of Greece. And that does not include the cost of contagion as the markets wonder who is next. Keeping Spanish and Italian interest-rate costs at levels that can be sustained will cost even more trillions, as not just government debt but the entire banking system is at stake. Not to mention the pension and insurance funds. If the cost of Greece leaving is €1 trillion, then who can guess the cost of Spain or Italy?
As I have written about previously, a Greek exit from the euro would cause the "bank jogs" that are already happening in Spain and Italy to accelerate.
The problem in Europe is not just government debt. The truth is that the entire European financial system is in danger of melting down.
Unfortunately, there are no more grand solutions on the horizon and so things are going to continue to get worse for Europe.
As I have talked about so many times, the next wave of the economic collapse is going to start in Europe, but it is going to deeply affect the entire globe.
During the next major economic downturn, the official unemployment rate in the United States will rise well up into the double digits.
Once that happens, perhaps many more Americans will finally figure out that they should have been paying much more attention to what was taking place in Europe.
http://theeconomiccollapseblog.com/arch … ern-europe
Statistics: Posted by yoda — Mon May 28, 2012 8:54 pm
View full post on opinions.caduceusx.com
25 Signs That The Smart Money Has Completely Written Off Southern Europe
When it comes to the financial world, it is important to listen to what the “smart money” is saying, but it is much more important to watch what the “smart money” is actually doing. The ultra-wealthy and those that run the biggest financial institutions on the planet are far more “connected” to what is really going on in financial circles behind the scenes than you and I could ever hope to be. But if we watch their behavior we can get clues as to what they think is about to happen. As is the case with so many other things, if you want to figure out what is really going on in Europe, just follow the money. And right now, money is rapidly flowing out of southern Europe and into northern Europe. In fact, some large corporations are now pulling the money that they make in Greece during the day out of the country every single night. It is becoming increasingly clear that the upper crust of the financial world considers a Greek exit from the euro to be “inevitable” and that it also considers much of the rest of southern Europe to be a lost cause. Unfortunately, a financial collapse across southern Europe is also likely to trigger another devastating global recession.
Even though all the warning signs were there, very few people actually expected to see the kind of financial crisis that we saw back in 2008.
But it happened.
Now very few people actually expect another “Lehman Brothers moment” to happen in Europe although the warning signs are all around us.
Sadly, most people never want to believe the truth until it is too late.
The following are 25 signs that the smart money has completely written off southern Europe….
#1 Lloyd’s of London is publicly admitting that it is rapidly making preparations for a collapse of the eurozone.
#2 According to the New York Times, top global law firms are advising their clients to withdraw all cash and all other liquid assets from Greece….
So their advice is blunt: Remove cash and other liquid assets from Greece and prepare to take a short-term hit on any other investments.
“My personal view is that it is irrational for anyone, whether a corporation or an individual, to be leaving money in Greek financial institutions, so long as there is a credible prospect of a euro zone exit,” said Ian M. Clark, a partner in London for White & Case, a global law firm that has a team of 10 lawyers focusing on the issue.
#3 According to CNBC, large numbers of wealthy Europeans have been moving their money from banks in southern Europe to banks in northern Europe….
Financial advisers and private bankers whose clients have accounts too large to be covered by a Europe-wide guarantee on deposits up to 100,000 euros ($125,000), are reporting a “bank run by wire transfer” that has picked up during May.
Much of this money has headed north to banks in London, Frankfurt and Geneva, financial advisers say.
“It’s been an ongoing process but it certainly picked up pace a couple of weeks ago We believe there is a continuous 2-3 year bank run by wire transfer,” said Lorne Baring, managing director at B Capital, a Geneva-based pan European wealth management firm.
#4 The President of the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia, Charles Plosser, says that the Federal Reserve is advising money market funds to reduce their exposure to Europe….
The Fed and regulators have tried to stress to money market funds, for example, to reduce their exposure to European financial institutions.
#5 The yield on 10-year Spanish bonds is rapidly moving toward the very important 7 percent level.
#6 Many multinational corporations that operate in Greece are now pulling their funds out of the country on a nightly basis.
#7 Juergen Fitschen, the co-CEO of Deutsche Bank, has publicly proclaimed that Greece is a “failed state“.
#8 The head of the Swiss central bank has admitted that Switzerland is developing an “action plan” for how it will handle the collapse of the eurozone.
#9 The European Commission has urged all member states to develop contingency plans for a Greek exit from the euro….
Last week, the European Commission said that it has asked member states to make plans to deal with a potential Greek exit, ahead of a second round of Greek elections on 17 June.
#10 PIMCO CEO Mohamed El-Erian says that a Greek exit from the euro “is probably inevitable“.
#11 Spanish stocks continue to drop like a rock.
#12 The percentage of bad loans on the books of Spanish banks has reached an 18 year high.
#13 Late on Friday, the Spanish government announced that banking giant Bankia is going to need a 19 billion euro bailout.
#14 Standard & Poor’s downgraded the credit ratings of five more Spanish banks to junk status on Friday.
#15 Moody’s downgraded the credit ratings of 16 Spanish banks back on May 17th.
#16 According to the Telegraph, “struggling European banks could be seized and controlled by Brussels as part of secret plans being drawn up”.
#17 The head of equity strategy at Societe Generale, Claudia Panseri, is warning that European stocks could fall by as much as 50 percent if Greece leaves the euro.
#18 Economist Marc Faber is warning that there is now a “100% chance” that there will be another global recession.
#19 There seems to be an increasing attempt to pin the problems that Greece is now experiencing on the behavior of Greek citizens. The following are some of the shocking things that the head of the IMF, Christine Lagarde, said in a recent interview….
“Do you know what? As far as Athens is concerned, I also think about all those people who are trying to escape tax all the time. All these people in Greece who are trying to escape tax.”
Even more than she thinks about all those now struggling to survive without jobs or public services? “I think of them equally. And I think they should also help themselves collectively.” How? “By all paying their tax. Yeah.”
It sounds as if she’s essentially saying to the Greeks and others in Europe, you’ve had a nice time and now it’s payback time.
“That’s right.” She nods calmly. “Yeah.”
And what about their children, who can’t conceivably be held responsible? “Well, hey, parents are responsible, right? So parents have to pay their tax.”
#20 According to the Telegraph, an unidentified member of Angela Merkel’s cabinet has stated that Germany simply will not “pour money into a bottomless pit”.
#21 This week the Bank of England is holding a “secret summit” of global central bankers to address the European financial crisis….
The summit will be dominated by central bankers including the host, Sir Mervyn King, Governor of the Bank of England. Mario Draghi, president of the European Central Bank, and Zhou Xiaochuan, governor of the People’s Bank of China, have been invited.
#22 According to Zero Hedge, a major German newspaper is reporting that a Greek exit from the eurozone is a “done deal”….
“The Greece-exit is a done deal: According to the German economic news from financial circles EU and the ECB have abandoned the motherland of democracy as a euro member. The reason is, interestingly, not in the upcoming elections – these are basically become irrelevant. The EU has finally realized that the Greeks have not met any agreements and will not continue not to meet them. A banker: “We helped with the Toika. The help of the troika was tied to conditions. Greece has fulfilled none of the conditions, and has been for months now.”
#23 According to CNBC, preparations are quietly being made to print up and distribute new drachmas should the need arise….
British banknote printer De La Rue is drawing up plans to print new drachma notes in the event of a Greek euro exit, according to an industry source with knowledge of the matter.
The world’s biggest security firm G4S expects to be involved in distributing notes around the country.
#24 Citibank’s chief economist Willem Buiter is warning that any new currency issued by the Greek government could “immediately fall by 60 percent“.
#25 Reuters is reporting that a planning memo exists that suggests that Greece could receive as much as 50 billion euros to “ease its path” out of the eurozone.
If Greece does leave the eurozone, the cost to the rest of Europe is going to be astronomical. The following is from a recent article by John Mauldin….
The debate among very knowledgeable individuals and institutions as to the future of Europe is intense. There are those who argue that the cost of breaking up the eurozone, even allowing Greece to leave, is so high that it will not be permitted to happen. Estimates abound of a cost of €1 trillion to European banks, governments, and businesses, just for the exit of Greece. And that does not include the cost of contagion as the markets wonder who is next. Keeping Spanish and Italian interest-rate costs at levels that can be sustained will cost even more trillions, as not just government debt but the entire banking system is at stake. Not to mention the pension and insurance funds. If the cost of Greece leaving is €1 trillion, then who can guess the cost of Spain or Italy?
As I have written about previously, a Greek exit from the euro would cause the “bank jogs” that are already happening in Spain and Italy to accelerate.
The problem in Europe is not just government debt. The truth is that the entire European financial system is in danger of melting down.
Unfortunately, there are no more grand solutions on the horizon and so things are going to continue to get worse for Europe.
As I have talked about so many times, the next wave of the economic collapse is going to start in Europe, but it is going to deeply affect the entire globe.
During the next major economic downturn, the official unemployment rate in the United States will rise well up into the double digits.
Once that happens, perhaps many more Americans will finally figure out that they should have been paying much more attention to what was taking place in Europe.
View full post on The Economic Collapse
Technology and the Internet • Android Tablet PC and smart phones launched an attack down t
Android Tablet PC and smart phones launched an attack down the first 3 years sales 6
Smart phones and android tablet PC by the impact, in the first quarter of the global PC (personal computer) sales decline 3 years for the first time,Onda Vi40 Android 4.0 the domestic PC market share or first-tier cities will be phones and tablet PCs to catch up. Authority from the U.S. Ainol Novo7 Elf research firm Gartner data show that in the first quarter, global PC sales reached 84.3 million units, down 1.1%, which is since 2009, PC sales in the first quarterly decline. Ainol Novo7 Aurora"In addition to the traditional PC sales decline of raw materials prices and the impact of the economic downturn, the both and other products are superior to PC users experience increased possibility of being replaced. Ramos W16 PC this year marked decline in market share." yesterday (April 18), Di, vice president of ICT Group, Feng Qi told the "Daily Economic News" interview, said the trend line in Beijing and other cities is particularly evident. Ramos W19 Di, head of ICT market, "said the current price of of two with only very low-end PC prices, or even lower, Zenithink C91 android 4.0 tablet many consumers will give priority to these." 60% of the total sales of smart phones And slightly decline in the PC market, compared to more crucial breakthrough smartphone trend. starzmart
Statistics: Posted by Bonney1990 — Thu Feb 16, 2012 2:00 am
View full post on opinions.caduceusx.com
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