There are many signs of gangster state America. One is the
collusion between federal authorities and banksters in a criminal
conspiracy to rig the markets for gold and silver.
My explanation that the sudden appearance of an unprecedented 400 ton
short sale of gold on the COMEX in April was a manipulation designed to
protect the dollar from the Federal Reserve’s quantitative easing
policy has found acceptance among gold investors and hedge fund
managers.
The sale was a naked short. The seller had no gold to sell. COMEX
reported having gold only equal to about half of the short sale in its
vaults, and not all of that was available for delivery. No one but the
Federal Reserve could have placed such an order, and the order came from
one of the Fed’s bullion banks, one of the entities “too big to fail.”
Bill Kaye of the Greater Asian Hedge Fund in Hong Kong and Dave
Kranzler of Golden Returns Capital have filled in the details of how the
manipulation worked. Being sophisticated investors of many years of
experience, both Kaye and Kranzler understand that the financial press
runs with the authorized story planted to serve the agenda that has been
put into play.
Institutional investors who have bullion in their portfolio do not
want the expense associated with storing it securely. Instead, they buy
into Exchange Traded Funds (ETF) and hold their bullion in the form of a
paper claim. The largest, the SPDR Gold Trust or GLD, trades on the New
York Stock Exchange. The trustee and custodian is a bankster, and only
other banksters are able to turn investments into delivery of physical
bullion. Only shares in the amount of 100,000 can be redeemed in gold.
The price of bullion is not set in the physical market where
individuals take delivery of bullion purchases. It is set in the paper
futures market where short selling can drive down the price even if the
demand for physical possession is rising. The paper gold market is also
the market in which people speculate and leverage their positions, place
stop-loss orders, and are subject to margin calls.
When the enormous naked shorts hit the COMEX, stop-loss orders were
triggered adding to the sales, and margin calls forced more sales.
Investors who were not in on the manipulation lost a lot of money.
The sales of GLD shares are accumulated by the banksters in 100,000
lots and presented to GLD for redemption in gold acquired at the driven
down price.
The short sale is leveraged by the stop-loss triggers and margin
calls, and results in a profit for the banksters who placed the short
sell order. The banksters then profit again as they sell the released
gold into the physical market, especially in Asia, where demand has been
stimulated by the sharp drop in bullion price and by the loss of
confidence in fiat currency. Asian prices are usually at a higher
premium above the spot prices in New York-London.
Some readers have said “don’t bet against the Federal Reserve; the
manipulation can go on forever.” But can it? As the ETFs such as GLD are
drained of gold, their ability to cover any of their obligations to
investors diminishes. In my opinion, these ETFs are like a fractional
reserve banking system. The claims on gold exceed the amount of gold in
the trusts. When the ETFs are looted of their gold by the banksters, the
gold price will explode, as the claims on gold will greatly exceed the
supply.
Kranzler reports that the current June futures contracts are 12.5
times the amount of deliverable gold. If more than 8 percent of these
trades were to demand delivery, COMEX would default. That such a
situation is possible indicates the total failure of federal financial
regulation.
What the Federal Reserve has done in order to maintain its short-run
policy of protecting the “banks too big too fail” is to make the
inevitable reckoning more costly for the US economy.
Another irony is the benefactors of the banksters sale of the gold
leeched from the gold ETFs. Asia is the beneficiary, especially India
and China. The “get out of gold line” of the US financial press enables
China to unload its excess supply of dollars, accumulated from the
offshored US economy, into the gold market at a suppressed price of
gold.
Kranzler points out that not only does the Fed’s manipulation permit
Asia to offload US dollars for gold at low prices, but the obvious lack
of confidence in the dollar that the manipulation demonstrates has
caused wealthy European families to demand delivery of their gold
holdings at bullion banks (the bullion banks are essentially the “banks
too big to fail”). Kranzler notes that since January 1, more than 400
tons of gold have been drained from COMEX and gold ETF holdings in order
to satisfy world demand for physical possession of bullion.
Again we see that institutions of the US government are acting 100%
against the interests of US citizens. Just who does the US government
represent?
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