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Gold Bullion Price Suppression To End? Bullion Bank Traders Arrested For Manipulating Market


 -- Published: Friday, 2 February 2018 | Print  | Disqus 

– CFTC fines UBS, HSBC and Deutsche Bank millions of dollars each for gold price manipulation 
– Deutsche Bank ‘engaged in a scheme to manipulate the price of precious metals futures contracts’
– UBS ‘attempted to manipulate the price of precious metals futures contracts’
– HSBC engaged ‘in numerous acts of spoofing with respect to certain futures products in gold and other precious metals’
– Gold ‘experts’ continue to deny legal rulings, evidence amassed by GATA, admissions by banks and central banks including Greenspan and monetary history
– Counter intuitively, gold bullion price suppression is good news for those prudent few who look at the situation ‘holistically’, take a long term view and buy gold and silver bullion as insurance

Editor: Mark O’Byrne

Source: David Brady, CFA @GlobalProTrader

A multi-agency CFTC-led investigation that also involved the Department of Justice and the FBI has resulted in ‘criminal and civil enforcement actions against three banks and six individuals involved in commodities fraud and spoofing schemes.’

Deutsche Bank, UBS and HSBC had all been accused of engaging in manipulating the gold price and the bullion banks have now admitted they are guilty of the charges and have paid fines.

All those named in the investigation have been found to be manipulating the gold and other precious metals markets.

The banks face fines, although they can hardly be described as hefty given the size of their balance sheets and impact of their actions. Deutsche Bank and UBS have agreed to pay $30 million and $15 million respectively, while HSBC will pay $1.6 million.

The fines have been reduced as each of the banks assisted the CFTC in investigations which go back to activities as far back as 2008 and admitted the charges.

For years the idea that precious metals markets are subject to more than just free market forces has been dismissed by the mainstream media and some market commentators  Many have referred to gold and silver manipulation and gold bullion price suppression as topic fodder for the conspiracy and deep web forums. This is despite many years and reams of much evidence to the contrary.

Isn’t this all illegal? Shouldn’t someone go to jail?

Yes, as part of the 2010 Dodd-Frank financial reform, spoofing is a criminal offence. What is spoofing?

Spoofing, as a reminder, involves placing bids to buy or offers to sell futures contracts with the intent to cancel them before execution. By creating an illusion of demand, spoofers can influence prices to benefit their market positions (ZeroHedge)

As explained above, the fines for UBS and Deutsche Bank are north of ten million, while the fine for HSBC is slightly less at £1.6 million. Surely traders and other connected employees should be facing prison?

As of Monday it sounds as though the authorities feel the same way. ZeroHedge via Reuters updates reported:

US authorities were set to arrest several people on Monday as part of the spoofing and manipulation probe. The individuals who are set to be perp walked, were previously employed as traders by UBS, Deutsche Bank and HSBC, and will be charged as part of the multi-agency probe,

Last August, a U.S. appeals court upheld the conviction of former New Jersey-based high-speed trader Michael Coscia who was the first individual to be criminally prosecuted for spoofing in the US, aside from Sarao of course.

Does this mean that manipulation is coming to an end?

Possibly but it is unlikely to, at least until monetary authorities including China’s PBOC wish it to. Or indeed, the media give Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee’s (GATA) allegations a fair hearing and report on the matter in a balanced manner and thereby put pressure on monetary authorities to desist from rigging precious metal prices through bullion bank proxies or indeed official partners such as the New York Federal Reserve.

Last May we brought you commentary from Jim Rickards. There he outlined how China was an active supporter of the gold bullion price suppression as it works in their short-term favour:

The price is being suppressed until China gets the gold that they need. Once China gets the right amount of gold, then the cap on gold’s price can come off. At that point, it doesn’t matter where gold goes because all the major countries will be in the same boat. As of right now, however, they’re not, so China has time to catch-up.

China has been saying, in effect, “We’re not comfortable holding all these dollars unless we can have gold. But if we are transparent about the gold acquisition, the price will go up too quickly. So we need the western powers to keep the lid on the price and help us get the gold, until we reach a hedged position. At that point, maybe we’ll still have a stable dollar.”

Gold and other markets (including bond yields) are ‘systemically suppressed’

Manipulation isn’t unique to precious metals markets. We have seen it in LIBOR most prominently but also elsewhere in the financial sphere. We must also remember that there are ‘legitimate’ forms of manipulation such as monetary policy which sees both the price and value of our currencies maniplated and indeed debased over the long term.

Manipulation is not victimless. To Joe Public a bank receiving a $30 million fine no longer seems newsworthy (it isn’t, it didn’t appear in the mainstream media) nor does the likely imprisonment of individual traders. It’s just ‘one of those things’ which we pretty much expect to go on.

But everyone is a victim. Gold bullion price manipulation, interest rate ‘setting’ and LIBOR fiddling all mean that markets are rigged. It increases the risks and skews the odds for the average saver or investor who does not have the financial awareness, acumen or power to fight back.

Twitter had some of the best comments regard the latest findings of gold manipulation. Ned Naylor-Leyland (@NedNL) put it very well on Twitter:

Gold ‘experts’ who continue to deny legal rulings, reams of physical evidence, common sense & basic monetary history by claiming

‘Well, Gold may be manipulated but it’s not systemically suppressed’ pic.twitter.com/Np8EorGiX1

Editors Note
Some considering investing in gold and silver, have asked us what is the point of investing in precious metals if there prices are suppressed by bullion banks with the consent or indeed encouragement of monetary authorities?

We have been asked this since 2003 when GoldCore was founded. The Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee (GATA) were alleging manipulation back then and indeed even then had a lot of evidence to suggest manipulation had been taking place including central bank and other insider admissions of gold price suppression.

Are answer has been consistent. Ultimately the forces of supply and demand for actual physical gold and silver bullion will determine the prices of the monetary metals in the long term. Electronic and paper suppression of prices through futures markets will shake out weak hands, deter some investors and speculators and impact both sentiment in the short and the medium term. However, ultimately the fundamentals of physical supply and demand will lead to higher prices in the long term. This was seen in the 2000 to 2011 gold bull market.

Those who are concerned should take a step back and look at the bigger picture. This presents an opportunity rather than a risk. A suppressed price means there is an opportunity for investors to accumulate more bullion at artificially depressed prices. Ironically and counter intuitively, gold price suppression is good news for those prudent few who look at the situation ‘holistically’, take a long term view and buy gold and silver bullion as insurance rather than purely for capital gains.

The key is to ensure you are holding physical bullion, outside of the paper system. Keep it safe by owning segregated and allocated gold and silver, in ultra secure vaults, in the safest jurisdictions.

Related reading

Gold and Silver Manipulation: Can It Be Empirically Verified?

Silver Bullion Manipulation By Banks Proven In Traders Chats

News and Commentary

Gold dips on outlook for U.S. rate hikes (Reuters.com)

Asian Stocks Gain; Investors Adapt to Higher Yield (Bloomberg.com)

U.S. Mint American Eagle coin sales fall from prior year (Reuters.com)

UK’s Royal Mint Launches Gold-Backed Cryptocurrency (CoinTelegraph.com)

Hatton Garden jewellery raiders ordered to pay £27.5m (JewelleryFocus.co.uk)


Source: SoundingLine

Video: Former Fed Chair Alan Greenspan Sees Bubbles in Stocks and Bonds (Bloomberg.com)

We may be heading for a major dollar bear market (MoneyWeek.com)

Two-Thirds Of UK Pension Funds Are In The Red – $300 Billion Shortfall Revealed (ZeroHedge.com)

Forget Stocks, Look At EU Bonds – They Are The Real Problem (Tumluongo.me)

Bad Debt Problem in Southern Europe Is the Worst in the World (TheSoundingLine.com)

Gold Prices (LBMA AM)

01 Feb: USD 1,341.10, GBP 941.99 & EUR 1,077.98 per ounce
31 Jan: USD 1,343.35, GBP 950.29 & EUR 1,078.98 per ounce
30 Jan: USD 1,345.70, GBP 954.37 & EUR 1,083.56 per ounce
29 Jan: USD 1,348.40, GBP 955.07 & EUR 1,085.46 per ounce
26 Jan: USD 1,354.35, GBP 950.21 & EUR 1,087.41 per ounce
25 Jan: USD 1,360.25, GBP 954.35 & EUR 1,095.27 per ounce
24 Jan: USD 1,350.50, GBP 957.50 & EUR 1,093.77 per ounce

Silver Prices (LBMA)

01 Feb: USD 17.19, GBP 12.09 & EUR 13.82 per ounce
31 Jan: USD 17.23, GBP 12.17 & EUR 13.84 per ounce
30 Jan: USD 17.30, GBP 12.24 & EUR 13.91 per ounce
29 Jan: USD 17.34, GBP 12.33 & EUR 13.99 per ounce
26 Jan: USD 17.40, GBP 12.21 & EUR 13.99 per ounce
25 Jan: USD 17.52, GBP 12.29 & EUR 14.12 per ounce
24 Jan: USD 17.19, GBP 12.16 & EUR 13.93 per ounce

https://news.goldcore.com/

 


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 -- Published: Friday, 2 February 2018 | E-Mail  | Print  | Source: GoldSeek.com

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