Showing posts with label tapering. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tapering. Show all posts

Friday, January 31, 2014

Why is the Federal Reserve Tapering the Gold Market?

Why is the Federal Reserve Tapering the Gold Market?
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Dr. Paul Craig Roberts and David Kranzler 
RINF Alternative News


In former times, the rise in the gold price was held down by central banks selling gold or leasing gold to bullion dealers who sold the gold. The supply added in this way to the market absorbed some of the demand, thus holding down the rise in the gold price.


As the supply of physical gold on hand diminished, increasingly recourse was taken to selling gold short in the paper futures market. We illustrated a recent episode in our article. Below we illustrate the uncovered short-selling that took the gold price down today (January 30, 2014).


When the Comex trading floor opened January 30 at 8:20AM NY time, the price of gold inexplicably plunged $ 17 over the next 30 minutes. The price plunge was triggered when sell orders flooded the Comex trading floor. Over the course of the previous 23 hours of trading, an average of 202 gold contracts per minute had traded. But starting at the 8:20AM Comex, there were four 1-minute windows of trading here’s what happened:


8:21AM: 1766 contracts sold
8:22AM: 5172 contracts sold
8:31AM: 3242 contracts sold
8:47AM: 3515 contracts sold


image


Over those four minutes of trading, an average of 3,424 contracts per minute traded, or 17 times the average per minute volume of the previous 23 hours, including yesterday’s Comex trading session.


The yellow arrow indicates when the Comex floor opened for gold futures trading. There was not any news events or related market events that would have triggered a sell-off like this in gold. If an entity holding many contracts wanted to sell down its position, it would accomplish this by slowly feeding its position to the market over the course of the entire trading day in order to avoid disturbing the price or “telegraphing” its intent to sell to the market.


Instead, today’s selling was designed to flood the Comex trading floor with a high volume of sell orders in rapid succession in order to drive the price of gold as low as possible before buyers stepped in.


The reason for this is two-fold: Driving down the price of gold assists the Fed in its efforts to support the dollar, and the Comex is running out of physical gold available to be delivered to those who decide to take delivery of gold instead of cash settlement.


The February gold contract is subject to delivery starting on January 31st. As of January 29th, 2 days before the delivery period starts, there were 2,223,000 ounces of gold futures open against 375,000 ounces of gold available to be to be delivered. The primary banks who trade Comex gold (JP Morgan, HSBC, Bank Nova Scotia) are the primary entities who are short those Comex contracts.


Typically toward the end of a delivery month, these banks drive the price of gold lower for the purpose of coercing holders of the contracts to sell. This avoids the problem of having a shortage of gold available to deliver to the entities who decide to take delivery. With an enormous amount of physical gold moving from the western bank vaults to the large Asian buyers of gold, the Comex ultimately does not have enough gold to honor delivery obligations should the day arrive when a fifth or a fourth of the contracts are presented for delivery. Prior to a delivery period or due date on the contracts, manipulation is used to drive the Comex price of gold as low as possible in order to induce enough selling to avoid a possible default on gold delivery.


Following the taper announcement on January 29, the gold price rose $ 14 to $ 1270, and the Dow Jones Index dropped 100 points, closing down 74 points from its trading level at the time the tapering was announced. These reactions might have surprised the Fed, leading to the stock market support and gold price suppression on January 30.


Manipulation of the gold price is a foregone conclusion. The question is: why is the Fed tapering?


The official reason is that the recovery is now strong enough not to need the stimulus. There are two problems with the official explanation. One is that the purpose of QE has always been to support the prices of the debt-related derivatives on the balance sheets of the banks too big to fail. The other is that the Fed has enough economists and statisticians to know that the recovery is a statistical artifact of deflating GDP with an understated measure of inflation. No other indicator–employment, labor force participation, real median family income, real retail sales, or new construction–indicates economic recovery. Moreover, if in fact the economy has been in recovery since June 2009, after 4.5 years of recovery it is time for a new recession.


One possible explanation for the tapering is that the Fed has created enough new dollars with which to purchase the worst part of the banks’ balance sheet problems and transfer them to the Fed’s balance sheet, while in other ways enhancing the banks’ profits. With the job done, the Fed can slowly back off.


The problem with this explanation is that the liquidity that the Fed has created found its way into the stock and bond markets and into emerging economies. Curtailing the flow of liquidity crashes the markets, bringing on a new financial crisis.


We offer two explanations for the tapering. One is technical, and one is strategic.


First the technical explanation. The Fed’s bond purchases and the banks’ interest rate swap derivatives have made a dent in the supply of Treasuries. With income tax payments starting to flow in, fewer Treasuries are being issued to put pressure on interest rates. This permits the Fed to make a show of doing the right thing and reduce bond purchases. As a weakening economy becomes apparent as the year progresses, calls for the Fed to support the economy will permit the Fed to broaden the array of instruments that it purchases.


A strategic explanation for tapering is that the growth of US debt and money creation is causing the world to turn a jaundiced eye toward the US dollar and toward its role as world reserve currency.


Currently the Russian Duma is discussing legislation that would eliminate the dollar’s use and presence in Russia. Other countries are moving away from the dollar. Recently the Nigerian central bank reduced its dollar reserves and increased its holdings of Chinese yuan. Zimbabwe, which was using the US dollar as its own currency, switched to Chinese yuan. The former chief economist of the World Bank recently called for terminating the use of the dollar as world reserve currency. He said that “the dominance of the greenback is the root cause of global financial and economic crises.” Moreover, the Federal Reserve is very much aware of the flight away from the dollar into gold, because it is this flight that causes the Fed to manipulate the gold price in order to hold it down and in order to be able to free up gold for delivery.


The Fed knows that the ability of the US to pay its bills in its own currency is the reason it can stand its large trade imbalance and is the basis for US power. If the dollar loses the reserve currency role, the US becomes just another country with balance of payments and currency problems and an inability to sell its bonds in order to finance its budget deficits.


In other words, perhaps the Fed understands that a dollar crisis is a bigger crisis than a bank crisis and that its bailout of the banks is undermining the dollar. The question is: will the Fed let the banks go in order to save the dollar?


Paul Craig Roberts is a former Assistant Secretary of the US Treasury for Economic Policy.


Dave Kranzler traded high yield bonds for Bankers Trust for a decade. As a co-founder and principal of Golden Returns Capital LLC, he manages the Precious Metals Opportunity Fund.




WHAT REALLY HAPPENED




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Wednesday, January 8, 2014

Asian stocks muted on Fed tapering outlook

Asian stocks muted on Fed tapering outlook

BEIJING (AP) — Asian stock markets were muted Thursday amid concern an improved U.S. economy might prompt the Federal Reserve to reduce its stimulus faster than previously expected.
Business Headlines



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Saturday, December 21, 2013

The FED Says Tapering Is Necessary And It"s Going To Be Painful -- Episode 161

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The FED Says Tapering Is Necessary And It"s Going To Be Painful -- Episode 161

Sunday, November 10, 2013

RPT-Wall St Week Ahead-Investors to keep focus on Fed for tapering clues

RPT-Wall St Week Ahead-Investors to keep focus on Fed for tapering clues
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Sun Nov 10, 2013 12:04pm EST



By Caroline Valetkevitch


NEW YORK Nov 10 (Reuters) – The U.S. stock market’s rally could be put to the test this week if comments from Federal Reserve officials including Janet Yellen add to views the central bank could be scaling back its stimulus plan sooner rather than later.


While the week is light on economic news, bond yields have been rising, giving further credence to the idea the Fed may temper its bond-buying program in the near future.


With less than two months left in the year, many investors are bracing for something that could shake up the stock market and the Standard & Poor’s 500′s 24 percent year-to-date gain.


That could come from the Fed, even if it is just that investors begin to anticipate the Fed will make a move.


“There needs to be some sort of catalyst, and that would be the No. 1 catalyst that I think could happen,” said Uri Landesman, president of Platinum Partners in New York. “This is a monster bull market.”


Continued stimulus and ultra-low interest rates from the Fed have boosted the stock market this year. As part of its quantitative easing policy, adopted more than four years ago, the Fed has been buying Treasury and other bonds each month to keep interest rates low and promote growth.


This week brings several speeches by Fed officials, but key will be a hearing Thursday before the U.S. Senate Banking Committee on the nomination of Fed Vice Chair Yellen to replace Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke.


Yellen has been a strong supporter of the stimulus and is expected to face criticism from Republicans concerned by the Fed’s ultra-easy monetary policy, but is considered likely to get approval for the position. Bernanke’s term expires on Jan. 31.


Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta President Dennis Lockhart is expected to speak on the economic outlook on Tuesday.


While most analysts still don’t expect the Fed to begin tapering before the end of the year, a string of mostly upbeat economic data this week, including Friday’s stronger-than-expected October payrolls report, pushed up the view that the Fed could act sooner rather than later.


A Reuters poll on Friday showed that more U.S. primary dealers now see the Fed scaling back its stimulus before March. Just two weeks ago, a similar poll found the majority of dealers expected the central bank would not start easing before March.


Stocks have been weighing the benefits of a stronger economy against chances of an earlier-than-expected reduction in Fed stimulus. On Friday, the stronger economy won out, with all three major indexes ending the day with gains of more than 1 percent each.


But the report initially pressured the market, causing stock futures to tumble, because of the possible implications for the Fed. And on the bond market, 10-year benchmark note prices slid 1-10/32 by late Friday, causing yields to shoot up to 2.75 percent from 2.60 percent.


“We will see what happens behind the doors at the Fed, but certainly there will be some reassessment of at least the possibility of a December and/or January tapering,” said Cameron Hinds, regional chief investment officer for Wells Fargo Private Bank in Nebraska.


Some analysts, including those at JPMorgan, said the stronger trend shifted the expected timing of the Fed tapering to January, earlier than the March-April period they had been expecting.


Friday’s upbeat jobs data came a day after a Commerce Department report showed gross domestic product grew at a 2.8 percent annual rate in the third quarter, the quickest pace in a year.


Some analysts say more data will likely be needed to show a real improvement trend.


The Fed seems to be focusing on a fairly long trend, said Rick Meckler, president of investment firm LibertyView Capital Management in Jersey City, New Jersey.


“I think this has been a positive sign in terms of giving them time to think about tapering, but they also have shown a willingness to wait until you get some consistently better numbers,” he said.


The coming week brings data on industrial output, as well as weekly jobless claims.


RETAILERS TO REPORT


Also on the agenda are results from several retailers, with results in the upcoming weeks rounding out the third-quarter earnings season.


Of the 16 S&P 500 companies expected to report this week, four will be retailers: Macy’s Inc, Kohl’s Corp, Wal-Mart Stores Inc and Nordstrom Inc.


Wal-Mart and Macy’s are expected to show increases in earnings from a year ago, while Kohl’s and Nordstrom are expected to report declines, Thomson Reuters data showed.


With results already in from 447 of the S&P 500 companies, the quarter’s estimated profit growth of 5.5 percent is likely to see little change.


But their results could also offer clues about the upcoming holiday shopping season, which some analysts have predicted could be among the slowest in years.


Wall St. Week Ahead moves every Sunday. Questions or comments on this one can be sent to caroline.valetkevitch(at)thomsonreuters.com.






Reuters: Bonds News




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Thursday, August 8, 2013

Shares, dollar drop on Fed tapering uncertainty


Leah Schnurr
Reuters
August 7, 2013


The dollar fell to a 7-week low against the yen on Wednesday while U.S. and European stocks waned as investors mulled when the Federal Reserve may start to remove the massive stimulus it has injected into the economy and markets.


The greenback also fell steeply against the pound after the Bank of England said it did not plan to lift interest rates until British unemployment falls to 7 percent, a level unlikely for another three years. But some investors, expecting that level to be reached sooner, brought forward their expectations for a rate hike, supporting sterling.


“Market participants are currently observing a situation where the data suggests a better economic outcome than they expected just a month or two ago,” said Bob Lynch, head of G10 FX strategy for the Americas at HSBC in New York.


Read more


This article was posted: Wednesday, August 7, 2013 at 4:26 pm


Tags: economics










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Shares, dollar drop on Fed tapering uncertainty