Our Man at Ringside Sees Epic Battle in Gold

The big boys have been trading body blows in gold, producing a lot of violence but no clear winner, at least not yet.  We expect the buyers to prevail eventually, and we’d suggest that you take the odds if you find someone with enough misplaced confidence to bet the “Don’t” line.  Still, we’d be the first to concede that sellers can pound bullion quotes mercilessly on a given day if the news is right. Remember in early December when they socked Comex futures for a $60 loss on “news” that the Government’s made-up unemployment number had dropped by two-tenths of a percentage point, to 10 percent?  That was on a Friday, when fear and greed are typically running higher than on other weekdays. The damage was serious enough that bullion futures limped $50 lower before finding a bottom just before Christmas.

Gold-swings

Yesterday, it looked like bears had the good guys on the ropes once again. Comex Gold was trading around $1118, down $40 from the previous day’s high, and looking even lower, to at least 1107.00. That last number is a Hidden Pivot target, and it was as clear and compelling as could be. Lo, buyers flooded into the market for no apparent reason and turned the tide, racking up a $27 gain into the close.  We were mystified by this until we heard from our friend and longtime subscriber Jonathan Auerbach of Auerbach Grayson.  Here’s his account, right from ringside:

Forget the Pundits

“For background, I have a COMEX seat and regularly trade gold. So this morning I want to share with you my morning gold notes over what I believe was a prodigious confrontation yesterday in the pits. Don’t waste your time this morning reading the pundits on where gold is going.  Yesterday was an epic battle in the pits between good and evil, bulls and bears, bullies and sissies, and ultimately concerted efforts at manipulating markets. The various legions that attacked and counter-attacked over the day turned over 215,000 100 oz contracts — the equivalent of $25 billion.

“Yet, at the end of the day, despite gold being down at one point more than $30 from the earlier daily high, little technical damage occurred and we look forward to seeing final open interest on Friday. The sellers played the knee-jerk card suggested several days ago here — that the interests of certain parties for a successful [U.S. Treasury] auction would not be met if gold’s recent robust recovery continued. So get yourself a ringside seat for this morning’s thrilla to see if the sellers have the guts (they couldn’t have conviction) to face the buyers who keep getting up. Never forget the Auerbach Doctrine: You can only manipulate a market in the direction it wants to go.”

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  • Mitch January 15, 2010, 1:56 am

    Great comments today concerning the COMEX.

    Rich,

    Gold does very well in deflation too. It’s all about the Dow/Gold Ratio and what purchasing power one will have holding gold long term. We won’t hit a top in gold until we see a 2:1 or 1:1 on that ratio, IMO. Down from 40 to 8-9 now I believe (last ten years).

    As a side note, I just got here to Kihei and noticed a Subway, Quizno’s, 7-11, a fish and chip and mexican place all gone from last year. Poof. CRE must be getting killed everywhere on the mainland if Maui is hurting this bad.

  • Rich January 14, 2010, 8:30 pm

    Aloha All
    With -6% real contraction in GDP last year, real long term rates are 10.64% with the 4.64 auction today.
    (As someone pointed out here recently, the GDP is mostly manufactured offshore, so in truth it is a dissipating mirage.)
    If $TYX hits its PnF target of 6.4%, with i rates going higher to reflect US credit risk, that may be at least 12.4% real Treasury PacMan iRates devouring what’s left of the economy.
    http://stockcharts.com/charts/gallery.html?$tyx
    http://www.shadowstats.com/alternate_data
    Could someone please explain how that is inflationary for gold or even the cost of living?
    Here’s a view of what government and unions accomplished in Detroit the last 50 years, spending $11,000 on each public school student and $130,000 on each UAW worker:
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1hhJ_49leBw
    Regards*Rich

  • FranSix January 14, 2010, 8:21 pm

    Anytime you have a strict confirmation of price control in the gold sector, it usually precedes any policy decision likely to positively impact gold prices, resulting in higher average gold prices in the longterm.

  • Robert January 14, 2010, 7:10 pm

    Ditto- I love getting the perspectives of a COMEX trader- many thanks to Mr. Auerbach.

    I liken the gold price to the analogy of trying to keep an inflated beach ball under water for a prolonged period. The harder you push down, the faster it pops back up when you let the pressure off, and the whole time, it looks for sideways momentum. or any other path of little resistance to put it back on its intended trajectory…

    The increasing number of speculative long contract holders that are not flinching when the bullion banks try to shake the tree is very telling- I believe that eventually these long holders are going to force the Banks to their obligation to deliver- and the impact on the spot price when that comes to pass could be amazing.

    The fact that this bull market is still in stealth mode (ie: the general public is blissfully unaware) indicates to me that the real positive price action still lies ahead.

    No tin-foil hat is required to understand the fundamentals of this market- but I think it DOES require a set of tin-foil blinders to ignore the possible ramifications of those fundamentals on the price.

    Long and Strong.

  • Rich January 14, 2010, 7:02 pm

    GATA tried for decades to run Big4 shorts with lawsuits and physical deliveries.
    Big4 have more money and unlimited credit lines.
    Financial system may break and implode when debt and deficits
    can no longer be serviced because government is too big
    and the economy too small..
    Not exactly inflationary.
    For 97 years the Fed rigged the game with fiat usury,
    shoving toxic assets on the Treasury and Taxpayers.
    After reaping their largest profits ever, Fed and Treasury may be
    going out with implosive structural failure like 9-11…

  • fallingman January 14, 2010, 4:58 pm

    Thanks for this. I’d love to get more / regular insights from someone actually on the floor of the Comex.

  • coolsaint January 14, 2010, 4:05 pm

    I’m no expert but I think these boullion banks , JPM et al., are playing with fire. At this point, with the entire globe (except US) buying gold and silver, I’m probably happiest when prices are pushed down — a buying opportunity . I agree with someone who said the floor for gold is around 1050 , the area where India bought a huge amount of it. At some point India, China et al. will eventually get so irritated at US banks for continually pushing the price down on PMs, that they may dump Treasurys in massive quantities to show the “greedy evil banksters” who’s really in charge .