Backwardation
The Golden Backwardation Rabbit Hole Gets Deeper: Subzero GOFO Slide Accelerates
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/09/2013 14:39 -0500
Yesterday we described the historic inversion in the Gold Forward Offered Rate, where the 1 and 3 Month GOFO rates sliding into negative territory for the first time since 2008 and 1999 respectively. Today, using the latest LBMA rate update, we observe that the gold backwardation is accelerating, and now the 6 Month GOFO has also joined the complex into sub-zero territory.
A Historic Inversion: Gold GOFO Rates Turn Negative For The First Time Since Lehman
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/08/2013 20:15 -0500
Today, something happened that has not happened since the Lehman collapse: the 1 Month Gold Forward Offered (GOFO) rate turned negative, from 0.015% to -0.065%, for the first time in nearly 5 years, or technically since just after the Lehman bankruptcy precipitated AIG bailout in November 2011. And if one looks at the 3 Month GOFO, which also turned shockingly negative overnight from 0.05% to -0.03%, one has to go back all the way to the 1999 Washington Agreement on gold, to find the last time that particular GOFO rate was negative.
JPMorgan Comes Out With First "Overweight" Call On Commodities Since September 2010
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/01/2013 14:10 -0500Following the drubbing in commodities in Q2 it is was only a matter of time that the pendulum swung the other way. At least that is the view of JPMorgan's commodities team led by Colin Fenton who says to "go overweight commodity indices now." JPM's summary: "It’s our first OW call on commodities since September 2010… we turned underweight commodities as an asset class in November 2011, shortly after it became apparent that Europe and Australia had entered manufacturing recessions and commodities were likely to underperform equities and bonds over the following 6 to 12 months, likely yielding negative returns in 1H12. Over the past year, we have grown more positive on the asset class, as energy has improved, expected menaces in bulks and metals have arrived, and sentiment across commodities has belatedly soured. However, our strategies have sought to be directionally neutral. Now, we move to recommend a net long, overweight exposure for institutional investors for the first time in more than two years, based on ten fundamental factors we quantify in this note." Yes, that includes gold, although as a hedge JPM adds: "Liquidity could fall quickly in summertime. Buy 25-delta puts in oil, copper, and gold to protect a core position in commodity index total return swaps."
Here Is What's Going On In China: The Bronze Swan Redux
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/20/2013 10:15 -0500
A month ago, when stock markets around the globe were hitting all time highs, we wrote "The Bronze Swan Arrives: Is The End Of Copper Financing China's "Lehman Event"?" which as so often happens, many read, but few appreciated for what it truly was - the end of a major shadow leverage conduit (one involving unlimited rehypothecation at that),and the collapse of a core source of shadow liquidity. One month later, China's "Lehman event" is on the verge of appearing, and with Overnight repo rates hitting 25% last night, coupled with rumors of bank bailouts rampant, it very well already may have but don't expect the secretive Chinese politburo and PBOC to disclose it any time soon. So now that the market has finally once again caught up with reality, for the benefit of all those who missed it the first time, here is, once again, a look at the arrival of China's Bronze Swan.
Theory of Interest and Prices in Paper Currency Part III (Credit)
Submitted by Gold Standard Institute on 06/17/2013 01:38 -0500We discuss legitimate credit vs. counterfeit central bank credit, the concepts of marginal time preference and productivity, speculation, and finally resonance.
Why is Gold Draining out of COMEX Warehouses?
Submitted by Monetary Metals on 06/14/2013 00:59 -0500It is a fact that COMEX gold inventories are falling and silver inventories are rising. Why and does this help predict the next price move?
First, Gold; Second, Japanese Equities; Who's Next For The 8-Sigma Risk Flare?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/25/2013 16:48 -0500
It is not just the massive short positioning in Gold futures that has BofAML's commodity strategists concerned; but the regime changes in the precious metal's volatility structures suggests risks are significantly mispriced relative to equities, rates, and other commodities. Following the most abrupt price collapse in 30 years, near-dated implied volatility in gold spiked dramatically in the past month. The term structure of implied gold volatility has also changed shape and the market now shows a marked put skew. Even then, the spike in precious metals volatility had remained a rather isolated event until this week’s sharp drop in Japanese equities. As the following chartapalooza demonstrates, while large-scale QE has tempered volatility across all asset classes for months, we remain concerned about the recent sharp price movements in gold or Japanese equities, and see a risk that other bubbling asset classes may follow.
The Bronze Swan Arrives: Is The End Of Copper Financing China's "Lehman Event"?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/23/2013 09:06 -0500
In all the hoopla over Japan's stock market crash and China's PMI miss last night, the biggest news of the day was largely ignored: copper, and the fact that copper's ubiquitous arbitrage and rehypothecation role in China's economy through the use of Chinese Copper Financing Deals (CCFD) is coming to an end.
Theory of Interest and Prices in Paper Currency Part II (Mechanics)
Submitted by Gold Standard Institute on 05/15/2013 23:47 -0500In this part, we discuss stocks vs. flows, how prices are formed in a market, a broad concept of arbitrage, spreads, and how money comes into and goes out of existence.
Gold Basis Report RE: Silver "Smashdown"
Submitted by Monetary Metals on 04/22/2013 01:28 -0500"The “coordinated smashdown of gold and silver” was on everyone’s mind this week, but is it true? Did the price of paper gold divorce from physical? Let's look at the data.
What Is Pushing Down the Gold Price?
Submitted by Monetary Metals on 04/18/2013 02:50 -0500Gold and silver crashed. Here is a sometimes-humorous and often-irreverent and hard-hitting discussion. This is a different perspective and we hope to expand your thinking about gold and silver.
Gold, Redeemability, Bitcoin, and Backwardation
Submitted by Monetary Metals on 04/03/2013 00:56 -0500I asked the question: is Bitcoin money? (It's price sure is rising parabolically like silver in 2011) In brief, I said no it’s an irredeemable currency. This generated some controversy in the Bitcoin community. I took it for granted that everyone would agree that money had to be a tangible good, but it turns out that requirement is not obvious. This prompted me to write further about these concepts.
Cyprus Forced Into Bailout Deal
Submitted by Monetary Metals on 03/27/2013 01:50 -0500Do you think that depositors in Cyprus are being taxed? That their money is being taken from them to go to the government in Cyprus or to Europe? Most analysis of the Cyprus bailout is wrong...
Guest Post: Gold Manipulation, Part 3: "The Systemic Risk Of Gold Manipulation"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/16/2013 13:22 -0500
This is the third and last of three articles we are posting on the price suppression of gold. In the first article we showed that, under mainstream economic theory, the suppression of the gold market is not a conspiracy theory, but a logical necessity, a logical outcome. Mainstream economics, framed by the Walras’ Law, believes in global monetary coordination which, to be achieved, necessitates that gold, if considered money, be oversupplied. The second article showed, at a very high (not exhaustive) level, how that suppression takes place and how to hedge it (if my thesis is correct, of course). Today’s article will examine the systemic impact of this suppression and test the claim of the gold bugs, namely that physical gold will trade at a premium over fiat/paper gold, commensurate with the credit multiplier created by the bullion banks. (Hint - it is)
Gold Caught With Its Backwardation Showing
Submitted by Monetary Metals on 03/05/2013 01:38 -0500Backwardation is when there is a (seemingly) risk-free profit to decarry the metal. It is fascinating that it persists. It’s been there for weeks! Does no one have gold to put towards this trade?





