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Alasdair Macleod: The threat to commodity derivatives

Section: Daily Dispatches

2:30p ET Thursday, September 19, 2024

Dear Friend of GATA and Gold:

GoldMoney research director Alasdair Macleod today published in his proprietary letter on Substack an essay that brilliantly summarizes the longstanding Western gold price suppression policy and the dishonest philosophy behind it, with an emphasis on the use of financial derivatives against gold and all commodity prices, which another British economist, Peter Warburton, intuited back in 2001:

https://www.gata.org/node/8303 

Once again Macleod kindly has given GATA permission to share his analysis with you below. It may make you want to consider subscribing to his letter, which comes out every few days. A seven-day free trial subscription is available. Rates are $10 per month or $120 per year. 

To learn more or subscribe, visit:

https://alasdairmacleod.substack.com/subscribe 

CHRIS POWELL, Secretary/Treasurer
Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee Inc.
CPowell@GATA.org

... Dispatch continues below ...


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The Threat to Commodity Derivatives

By Alasdair Macleod
Thursday, September 19, 2024

For years, bulls of gold and silver have complained about how derivatives have been used to suppress their prices. Their dreams of the practice ending could be coming true.

... Introduction

If you think about it, there is a simple reason that derivatives for speculating in or hedging gold is fatally flawed. It is because in nearly every nation's common law, gold is money, and currencies are inferior credit, which is where payment risk actually lies. That the Western financial establishment is ignorant of this does not change the law.

There is good reason why this matters. Gold has lasted as legal money, and credit has been separately acknowledged to be deferred payment in money since Rome's Twelve Tables defined them and their relationship in 449 BC. Since then there have been many instances of governments denying these facts and promoting their currencies in the place of gold, which have always ended in their collapse.

In any price relationship involving a medium of exchange, there is an objective value and a subjective one. The objective value is always in the medium of exchange and the subjective value is in the goods or services being exchanged. Put another way, the buyer and seller will both value money or its substitute the same, but the buyer values the goods or services more highly than the seller. Otherwise the exchange won't take place. 

But if gold is the money, where does that leave a fiat currency?

Clearly, if the currency is not a credible gold substitute, then it should bear the subjective value relative to gold. That it is not regarded this way is partly due to government anti-gold propaganda, but mainly due to accounting in the government's currency for tax purposes. 

Furthermore, while a gold standard is always defined as a currency being exchangeable for a given weight of gold, for convenience it is referred to as so many currency units per gramme or ounce. This gives the erroneous impression that gold is being priced in the subordinate currency.

But in the knowledge that a fiat currency always fails while gold as money never does, the recognition of this reality will eventually kill off any derivatives in gold, and if the market in derivatives evolves without collapsing entirely, it should then refer to fiat currencies in terms of gold-grammes, or better still in a credible gold substitute instead, if one exists.

That gold derivatives should not exist in the first place should be borne in mind in the context of this article.

... The plan was to kill off gold as money

Following the inflationary 1970s, which almost destroyed the post-1971 dollar-based fiat currency system, there can be little doubt that the deep thinkers in the U.S. Treasury thought long and hard as to how to drive inflation out of the economy while promoting the dollar to kill off gold as money. 

The answer they chose came in three distinct policies.

The first and most obvious was to reform the financial system so that the banks would wrest control of financial securities from the brokerage industry. This resulted in London's big-bang, implemented by the Thatcher government in the mid-1980s at the U.S. Treasury's behest. A capital-starved securities industry would become turbocharged by bank finance, ensuring a perpetual bull market in financial asset values, including government debt, and ensuring everlasting demand for dollars.

The second was to reform statistical calculation for key economic indicators, such as consumer price inflation and jobless figures, giving a measure of government control over them to create the illusion of currency stability. 

Not only was the indexation cost of pensions and welfare contained, but interest rates were thereby permitted to be lower than they would otherwise be. In fact, all economic statistics are produced by government agencies, which control this information.

The third was to sanction and encourage derivative markets to expand and by doing so divert speculative demand from physical markets for gold. This was to prevent gold prices from being driven higher, threatening the status of the dollar as a medium of exchange. It was the basis of the massive expansion of gold trading on the London Bullion Market Association, and the expansion of gold futures under the control of the large U.S. banks that would occasionally act as conduits for the U.S. Exchange Stabilization Fund.

Forty-four million ounces were cleared daily in 1998 on the London bullion market, valued at approximately $13 billion at that time. Last May, volume had dropped to a low of 16 million ounces, but at higher prices it was valued at $37 billion. It should be noted that outstanding forward commitments measured by their average duration in days are unrecorded multiples of daily settlement.

The falling settlement numbers in London forward ounces from 44 million to 16 million while the value of the settlement rose 2.8 times illustrates the problem paper markets now face. On Comex, which has the same problem, this is demonstrated by the gross and net short position of the Swaps category, which is comprised mainly of bullion bank traders.

Between 2010-2018, the average gross short position was $15 billion, compared with $75 billion today. And the net position averaged $7 billion, compared with $61 billion currently.

This particularly matters because physical gold is now being drained out of London and New York directly or indirectly by a combination of central bank and wider Asian demand. While London faces a liquidity crisis of available gold bullion, Comex has a position that is proving impossible to contain, drifting into ever higher liabilities for bullion bank traders.

Hope that demand for physical gold will diminish, allowing the bullion establishment to initiate a raid on bullish speculators, is proving to be whistling into the wind, a wind blowing with increasing strength driven by a mixture of geopolitics and increasing credit risk facing the fiat dollar. 

In short, gold derivative markets are drifting onto the rocks of a crisis.

... Gold is central to everything

This matters, because gold is central to everything, more so than the illusory dollar. The reason is that gold as money in possession has no counterparty risk, while the fiat dollar with increasing counterparty risk is of uncertain future value. The central banks accumulating bullion, as well as other Asian entities and individuals, are being motivated to rid themselves of this dollar uncertainty, choosing not to encash them for other currencies, which are ultimately tied to the dollar's credibility.

The relationship between dollars and gold certainly has been a conundrum for many since the suspension of the Bretton Woods Agreement in 1971. The Western financial establishment has lost all compass as to which is money and which is credit, with most actors not even aware of gold's central importance. 

Priced in dollars, commodity and energy prices have risen multiple times and with great volatility, while they have been remarkably steady priced in gold. The point being made is that the approaching problems in paper gold contracts will almost certainly be transmitted into higher dollar prices for commodities generally as paper hedging in the form of derivatives diminishes. And the catalyst for an implosion of commodity and energy derivatives is gold.

Just as derivatives have suppressed gold and other commodity values from the 1980s onwards, their ending is set to unleash an explosion of physical replacement demand. 

The contraction of outstanding commodity derivatives will not be without accidents. Banks will face enormous write-offs, and doubtless some rescues will have to be arranged by the authorities. And there's no guarantee that other derivative markets, such as interest rate swaps and forex markets, will go unscathed because of the commonality of derivative counterparties.

The rise in values for gold and commodities generally is the same thing as a decline in the value of the dollar for the purpose of dealing in commodities. Foreign holders of dollars will be acutely aware of the consequences, dumping dollars increasingly to hoard commodities.

Looking at oil and base metal values, they are already relatively cheap priced in gold. Or put the other way, being moderately expensive, gold appears to have begun to discount a wider currency crisis while these commodities have not yet. Their relative cheapness is probably attributable in part to the onset of recession in Western economies being discounted in derivative markets, which as yet are unaffected by a bear squeeze on the establishment already evident in gold derivatives.

Forced by global markets, as opposed to those under the control of the U.S. authorities, the wisdom of ancient Roman lawmakers in framing the origin of all their successor nations' common law is being reaffirmed. The error being corrected today is the accumulation of fiat currency distortions of the last 53 years, which looks like it is coming to a financially violent end.

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