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  • Tag Archives Silver Manipulation
  • FERC Suspends JP Morgan’s Power Trading Unit

    JP Morgan ChaseJP Morgan’s electricity trading desk will essentially be sidelined for 6 months next year because of actions taken by the U.S. Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC).  According to the Los Angeles Times, the regulations authority accuses JP Morgan of misrepresenting facts and filing false information in its reporting and communications with the California Independent System Operator known as Caiso.

    This all stems from August last year, when FERC started investigating JP Morgan Ventures Energy Corp. for alleged abusive bidding activities and potentially manipulative trading practices in the energy markets. Then, earlier this year in July, FERC sued JP Morgan because it had refused to turn over internal emails FERC had requested during its investigations.

    Of course JP Morgan officials deny any wrong-doing, excusing any reporting deficiencies as inadvertent mistakes that were made in “good faith.”  But in its decision, FERC states “no showing of the respondent’s intent or mindset is necessary in order to demonstrate that a violation” has occurred.

    So here we have a regulatory agency that has the integrity and courage to stand up to the banking giants when they see clear violations and market manipulation. If only the CFTC would take notice. In their 4+ years of investigating the alleged silver market manipulation by JP Morgan, nothing has resulted.

    In his letter to subscribers, Ted Butler included the following:

    While we hear excuses from the CFTC about the need to prove intent before bringing charges of manipulation against JPMorgan in silver, FERC insisted that intent was a side issue. FERC’s got it exactly right, in my opinion. If someone is messing with the market, there is no need to pussy foot around intent; stop the messing around first and then sort out the details later.  We can decide in time if JPMorgan is manipulating silver intentionally or by accident; the important point is to first stop the manipulation. Not every homicide is premeditated and to be prosecuted as murder one; some homicides are manslaughter and not premeditated. That doesn’t mean we tolerate people killing people if the intent isn’t clear. Likewise, JPMorgan is clearly manipulating the price of silver by virtue of their concentrated short position and status of being the dominant seller of new short contracts. First the CFTC should make them stop; then charges can be decided upon.

     But then again, there aren’t any FERC members within the inner circle of elite central planning known as the Plunge Protection Team.


  • CFTC Commissioner Bart Chilton Comments on Silver Manipulation

    In this RT episode, Lauren Lyster interviews CFTC Commissioner Bart Chilton and they discuss:

    • The ongoing investigation of alleged silver market manipulation and Mr. Chilton specifically admits he’s seen one market participant have a controlling 30% concentrated position in that market. (It should be noted that this 30% position dominance is on the short side of the market. And the reader is urged to remember that in 1980, the Hunt Brothers were charged with having only a 20%  dominance on the long side of the market.)
    • The difficulty in winning a legal action suit that alleges manipulation is in proving intent.
    • The increasing evidence of fraud in the market place, exemplified by such cases as MF Global and Peregrine.  Mr. Chilton’s recommendations on protecting against future occurrences include the creation of an investor insurance program like that savers are provided with by the FDIC.
    • The delay in Dodd-Frank rules and the fact that “government is slow and reactive.”


  • JP Morgan Stockpiling Physical Silver

    Posted on by JonK Comment

    JP Morgan Physical Silver Stock - www.chartsrus.comJP Morgan has taken delivery of almost 10 million ounces of silver over the last month bringing its current holdings to just under 14 million.  As the chart shows, something has changed and JPM is adjusting its strategy in the silver market.

    According to analysis by Ted Butler, JPM has had an abnormally large short position of paper silver in the futures markets ever since they acquired Bear Stearns in 2008.  He estimates JPM’s current short position to be 18,000 contracts, which represents 90 million ounces of silver.

    The new strategy being employed by JPM is likely to be one of the following:

    1. Acquire as much physical silver as possible to dump on the market, forcing silver prices to fall and enable JPM to unload its short position in the futures market.  JPM takes a small loss on the physical silver and a huge profit on their paper futures contracts.
    2. Acquire as much physical silver as possible prior to covering their futures positions. Depending on how quickly JPM covers, the loss on the paper contracts could be limited, while the long-term growth potential of the physical silver remains.
    3. Acquire as much physical silver as necessary to enable delivery to those parties taking the opposite side of JPM’s short issues.
    4. Perhaps some combination of all of the above.

    Judging from past behavior of these Wall Street giants, one would suspect that JP Morgan is likely to chase after whatever gives them the most profits in the shortest time (option 1).  However, Mr. Butler has noted that over the past year of frantic turnover in COMEX silver inventories (in and out movement) there has been some big underlying demand that has not been so obvious to the main stream. Whether JPM plans to dump their accumulated physical silver at some point is unknown, but generally folks buy when they expect something to go up.

     


  • Hunt Brothers’ Attempt to Corner Silver

    In the 1970′s, the Hunt brothers tried to ‘corner’ the market in silver.  They realized that the market was extremely small and if they could start taking delivery of enough physical metal tied to futures contracts, it would cause a physical shortage and the price would shoot up.  So, with the help of financial backing from Sheik Khalid bin Mahfouz of Saudi Arabia and his discrete offshore company in Bermuda, International Metals Investment Company, they embarked on a strategy to gain control of and profit from their silver scheme.

    As they continued taking delivery of their futures contracts, their silver inventory increased and silver prices began surging. The managers of the COMEX were so concerned, they enlisted the help of regulators to stop the brothers’ attempt to control the silver market. The CME and CFTC ended up changing the rules to limit the number of contracts any one individual or institution could hold, thus having the immediate result of halting silver’s price surge.  It’s interesting to note that today, regulators are not taking the same steps to halt the same kind of manipulation on the short side of the silver market.

    Part 1


    Part 2




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