Fireworks ahead?
Richard Russell
Dow Theory Letters
Sep 8, 2003
Extracted
from the Sep 6, 2003 issue of Richard's Remarks
--When do people put out shorts?
They put out shorts when they think a market has risen too far,
too fast. In other words, they put out shorts when they believe
a market is vulnerable and ready to decline.
When you put out shorts, you are creating supply. You
sell a thousand shorts in GM, and you are creating a supply that
someone will buy. So certain interests may put out shorts to
stop a market's upward progress. They do this by creating supply.
They are hoping that by increasing supply they will overwhelm
the buyers and drive prices lower.
Or -- you might put out shorts because the item you're dealing
with is suddenly in demand, and at the moment you don't have
enough supply. This could be an operation by a bank or a gold
mine or what have you.
Now check out these amazing figures. These are the number of
shorts that have been put out by the Commercials, which are gold
banks, or jewelers who use large quantities of gold or possibly
some mines, possibly some large brokers.
August 5 --- 145,598 shorts in gold contracts listed on the COMEX.
August 12 --- 151,016 thousand shorts in COMEX gold
August 19 --- 174,211 gold shorts
August 26 --- 184,612 gold shorts.
Sept. 2 ------ 209,840 gold shorts (highest in a year).
Question -- What are the Commercials doing? They've shorted
the hell out of gold -- yet gold continues to climb. The Commercials
are correct in the great majority of cases. But what's happening
here?
Honestly, I don't know.
But I'm wondering.
All this new supply of gold
(coming from the shorts) has to be bought, otherwise gold will
cave in -- break down in the face of this increasing supply.
But so far gold has been rising against the persistent shorting
by the Commercials.
So here's what I'm wondering. Could the commercials be misjudging
the market -- could they be putting out shorts in the face of
a strengthening primary bull market in gold -- a bull market
that's out of the control of the Commercials?
We know that in a primary bull market on Wall Street, a rising
short interest is "dynamite." It almost always ensures
that the stock market is going higher. The force of the primary
bull trend literally "eats up" the shorts, driving
them to cover at ever-higher prices.
And I wonder, is this what's happening to the Commercial shorts
in gold? Is the buying of gold and gold futures so strong that
it is "eating up" all the shorts that the Commercials
are putting out? After all, the Commercials have been increasing
their shorts for five weeks, and on the latest count the Commercials
have boosted their shorts to a huge 209,840 thousand contracts,
the highest level of the year -- and yet on Friday gold closed
up 4.70 on the December contract to 378.80, its highest level
in seven months.
So is this one of those very rare times when the powerful Commercials
are battling a force even stronger than they are -- that force
being the primary trend of the market in gold?
I really don't have the answer to this one, but if the Commercials
have misjudged the situation, you can expect fireworks in the
gold market coming up. But remember, the Commercials have huge
resources and are very seldom wrong. Let me put it this way --
it's a fascinating situation, and if gold doesn't start to weaken
very soon and thereby serve the Commercials -- then watch out.
Final question -- Why are the Commercials putting our so many
shorts? Are they simply making a "play" against gold,
trying for some short-term profits -- or is there some deeper
reason why they want gold lower? I don't have the answer to that
one. The Fed and the Treasury say that they take no part in manipulating
the gold price.
Gold is possibly the most emotion-charged of all investments.
Believers in gold state that only gold is real money, and that
fiat currencies such as dollars are created in direct violation
of the United States Constitution. They further state that gold
has outlasted every paper currency that has ever been created.
Thus, those using paper currency as savings are being systematically
and methodically cheated in terms of retained purchasing power.
The central banks hate gold because gold means discipline. Gold
in the system interferes with the ability of the central banks
to create currency "out of thin air." It takes away
the banks' power to inflate.
The public is, in general, oblivious to what is happening and
to what is being done to them. The public doesn't understand
money, and it doesn't understand gold. The public tends to believe
what the government tells them -- which, when it comes to money,
is as little as possible.
More follows for subscribers
. . .
Richard Russell
Dow Theory
Letters
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