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Silver and Gold Prices: The Gold Price Closed at $1,291.70

Silver and <b>Gold Prices</b>: The <b>Gold Price</b> Closed at $1,291.70


Silver and <b>Gold Prices</b>: The <b>Gold Price</b> Closed at $1,291.70

Posted: 26 May 2014 08:08 PM PDT

26-May-14PriceChange% Change
Gold Price, $/oz1,291.700.000%
Silver Price, $/oz19.3880.000%
Gold/Silver Ratio66.6240.000%
Silver/Gold Ratio0.01500.000%

Franklin didn't publish commentary today, if he publishes later it will be available here.

Aurum et argentum comparenda sunt -- -- Gold and silver must be bought.

- Franklin Sanders, The Moneychanger
The-MoneyChanger.com

© 2014, The Moneychanger. May not be republished in any form, including electronically, without our express permission. To avoid confusion, please remember that the comments above have a very short time horizon. Always invest with the primary trend. Gold's primary trend is up, targeting at least $3,130.00; silver's primary is up targeting 16:1 gold/silver ratio or $195.66; stocks' primary trend is down, targeting Dow under 2,900 and worth only one ounce of gold or 18 ounces of silver. or 18 ounces of silver. US $ and US$-denominated assets, primary trend down; real estate bubble has burst, primary trend down.

WARNING AND DISCLAIMER. Be advised and warned:

Do NOT use these commentaries to trade futures contracts. I don't intend them for that or write them with that short term trading outlook. I write them for long-term investors in physical metals. Take them as entertainment, but not as a timing service for futures.

NOR do I recommend investing in gold or silver Exchange Trade Funds (ETFs). Those are NOT physical metal and I fear one day one or another may go up in smoke. Unless you can breathe smoke, stay away. Call me paranoid, but the surviving rabbit is wary of traps.

NOR do I recommend trading futures options or other leveraged paper gold and silver products. These are not for the inexperienced.

NOR do I recommend buying gold and silver on margin or with debt.

What DO I recommend? Physical gold and silver coins and bars in your own hands.

One final warning: NEVER insert a 747 Jumbo Jet up your nose.

<b>Gold Price</b> Manipulation Will Carry No Consequences

Posted: 27 May 2014 09:36 AM PDT

Whether it's by coincidence or not, we don't know, but gold has been very quiet ever since Deutsche Bank dumped its seat on the London gold fixing panel in late April.

For some time before that regulators were sniffing around the London gold 'fix'…and something didn't smell quite right.

The London gold fix is a process by which five investment banks set (errr…fix) the price of gold on a twice daily basis in London. It's been going on like that since 1919 when NM Rothschild controlled the process.

But in January, Deutsche Bank announced that it would relinquish its gold fixing seat (under pressure from the German financial regulator). It hoped to sell its seat to another player, but curiously no one was interested. As a result, it resigned the seat in late April, giving two weeks' notice.

At the same time, Deutsche resigned from the silver fix. Because the daily silver fix only had three participants, this move effectively killed the price setting process. The silver fix, which began in 1897, will cease in August this year.

So here we have a major player getting out of a supposedly venerable position very quickly. Then, just a few weeks later, the UK's Financial Services Authority (FSA) fines Barclays Bank £26 million for manipulating the gold fixing process. Of course this was just an isolated incident, and the FSA also fined a Barclays 'rogue trader' £96,000 pounds for doing the manipulating. It's not as if it's systemic or anything…

Maybe that's why the gold price has been remarkably quiet these past few weeks. The fixers know the regulators are watching. Everyone's behaving. But it's not going to stay like that for long.

The fining of Barclay's… highlights what a degenerate racket the whole financial system has become.

The fining of Barclay's for manipulating the gold fix highlights what a degenerate racket the whole financial system has become. It's a great business model for banks and governments. Here's how it works:

Governments and central banks ensure a constant policy of inflationism and easy money…money that flows to the large banks before it gets to anyone else in the economy. This torrent of cash is sure to corrupt the most upstanding citizen, because when it comes to money, you can always have more, right?

It goes without saying then that in such a system, you're going to have errors of judgment, oversight, and outright deception and corruption. But do the regulators actually try to stop it?

No, they just impose fines to get their cut too. Fines don't discourage bad behaviour; they are just a cost of doing business.

In 2013 the FSA brought in nearly £500 million…so far this year its take is £141 million.

According to analysis by the Financial Times, global investment banks have paid $100 billion in US legal settlements since the financial crisis in 2008. Yet no senior executives of any bank have had criminal charges laid against them.

Our high school economics teacher once said: 'Boys, if you're thinking of going into the crime business, stick to the white collar stuff. They go easy on you.' He was spot on…more so than he would've thought at the time.

The regulators are not interested in criminal charges. They are not interested in deterring such behaviour. They are interested in taking a cut and allowing the game to proceed. It's a dirty racket and you're paying for it.

Take a look at Barclays' track record. The recent fine for gold fixing related to a period back in 2012, which came just days after the bank copped a record fine for manipulating the 'Libor' interest rate. Now, senior executives are under a probe by the UK's Serious Fraud Office for dodgy dealings in Qatar during 2008. How's the 'culture' at Barclays!

Don't expect any of this to stop. It's what happens in the latter stages of degenerate capitalism. Critics are quick to point out that capitalism is the problem. It's not.

The chief problem is the constant manipulation of the rate of interest. By holding rates for a prolonged period below the 'natural rate' (the free market rate where the needs of savers and investors are balanced out) you create distortions on such a grand scale there is practically no fix apart from a system bust up.

In the meantime, bankers behaving badly, and regulators taxing this behaviour (but not discouraging it) will continue. It will lead to greater resentment and class warfare. The likes of Thomas Piketty and his Marxist schemes of wealth re-distribution will gain traction, and real wealth will diminish further as the genuine producers are taxed out of existence.

Getting back to the gold fix, you could well be seeing the beginning of an end of an era in London. The Financial Review reports today that:

'China has approached foreign banks and gold producers to participate in a global gold exchange in Shanghai, people familiar with the matter said, as the world's top producer and importer of the metal seeks greater influence over pricing.

The Shanghai Gold Exchange (SGE) got the go ahead from the central bank last week to launch a global trading platform in the city's pilot free trade zone, a move that could challenge the dominance of New York and London in gold trade and pricing.'

That's a big call, and it will take some time. But if China can demonstrate a more transparent pricing process than London, it's on its way to usurping it as a major gold trading hub. The other major challenge for China is protecting private property rights.

Large holders of gold (think the Saudis) are happy leaving their gold in London because the UK is secure (it's an island and difficult to invade) and they know authorities won't confiscate their gold. It has a long history of protecting private property.

Would the Saudis feel as safe leaving their gold on the Chinese mainland? Not right now. But China can chip away at the UK's competitive advantage by enacting property rights laws and upholding them in all circumstances.

At the very least, China wants to develop an Asian trading hub for the precious metal as well as other commodities that it's a large consumer of. Wresting part of that role from London should improve pricing transparency and business. When it comes to trading hubs, liquidity begets liquidity and it could soon dominate the market, leaving London to become a deep storage unit for gold…not a very lucrative business.

Regards,

Greg Canavan
for The Daily Reckoning

Ed. Note: In today's email edition of the Daily Reckoning — a completely FREE publication — there were many other insights on the horribly corrupted state of the financial industry besides this essay. However, that material is only available to subscribers of the email edition. In fact, by not subscribing, you actually miss out on 50% of all the material we publish each day. But there's good news… You can sign up right now, for FREE, by clicking here. Don't miss another issue or any of the incredible, potentially fortune building analysis you'll only get with the Daily Reckoning email edition. Sign up for FREE, right here.

Barclays Slapped With $44 Million Fine Over <b>Gold Price</b> Fix - NBC <b>...</b>

Posted: 23 May 2014 10:49 AM PDT

Barclays Plc has been fined 26 million pounds ($43.8 million) for failures in internal controls that allowed a trader to manipulate the setting of gold prices, just a day after the bank was fined for rigging Libor interest rates in 2012.

Britain's Barclays is the first bank to be fined over attempted manipulation of the 95-year-old London gold market daily "fix", although a source familiar with the fine said it was a one-off and not part of a wider investigation into gold price rigging.

The Financial Conduct Authority said on Friday there were failings at Barclays from 2004 until 2013, but the key event occurred on June 28, 2012, a day after UK and U.S. regulators fined it $450 million over attempted Libor rigging.

"A firm's lack of controls and a trader's disregard for a customer's interests have allowed the financial services industry's reputation to be sullied again," said Tracey McDermott, the FCA's director of enforcement and financial crime.

The FCA said it had banned former Barclays trader Daniel James Plunkett and fined him 95,600 pounds for exploiting weaknesses in the bank's systems.

Plunkett was a director on the precious metals desk at Barclays and was responsible for pricing products linked to the price of precious metals and managing Barclays' risk exposure to those products. The FCA said Plunkett gave the watchdog and Barclays untruthful accounts of his trading activity.

Attempts by Reuters to locate and contact Plunkett online were not immediately successful.

"We very much regret the situation that led to this settlement ... these situations strengthen our resolve to improve," Barclays Chief Executive Antony Jenkins said in a statement on Friday.

-- Reuters

First published May 23 2014, 10:40 AM

The Real <b>Gold Price</b> Fix Is Much Worse

Posted: 27 May 2014 11:33 AM PDT

Home > The Real Gold Price Fix Is Much Worse
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The Real Gold Price Fix Is Much Worse

gold timeDavid Zeiler: Barclays Plc (NYSE ADR: BCS) was fined $43.8 million today (Friday) by a U.K. regulatory agency as part of a gold price fix episode back in 2012 – a rare moment of public exposure for the bigger issue of gold price manipulation.

gold price fix

In the Barclays incident, trader Daniel Plunkett was able to evade weak internal controls to fix the price of gold in order to avoid a big payout. If gold closed above $1,558.96 that day, Barclay's would have owed $3.9 million to one savvy customer who had bet gold prices would rise.

Plunkett was able to do this because Barclays is one of the world's banks involved in the twice-daily gold price fix exercise. Not all investors might be aware that the benchmark price for gold is determined not by market trading but by just four banks – HSBC Holdings Plc (NYSE ADR:HSBC), Societe Generale SA (OTCMKTS ADR: SCGLY), Bank of Nova Scotia (NYSE: BNS), and Barclays – in two conference calls at 10:30 a.m. and 3 p.m. London time. (Deutsche Bank AG (NYSE: DB) was also a member but resigned its seat in April and stopped participating as of May 14.)

The "gold price fix" practice started in 1919 and serves the purpose of allowing gold to be bought and sold by miners, jewelers, and central and commercial banks at a single price.

It also let Plunkett manipulate the price just below the level where he'd take the big hit.

"A firm's lack of controls and a trader's disregard for a customer's interests have allowed the financial services industry's reputation to be sullied again," said Tracey McDermott, director of enforcement and financial crime for the Britain's Financial Conduct Authority (FCA), which imposed the fine.

Here's how he almost got away with it…

NYSE:GLD, NYSE:IAU, NYSE:SLV


 

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