When precious metals expert Michael Ballanger looks at the current state
of the precious metals markets, he is reminded of that scene from
Shakespeare's Julius Caesar when the wounded emperor looks up into his friend
Brutus' eyes and utters the immortal words, "Et tu, Brute?"
Caesar says these words as a large scabbard gets plunged into his innards,
signifying in modern lore a phrase describing the ultimate betrayal by a
friend. And looking at the behavior of the bullion banks as measured against
the vast majority of gold "analysts" out there, I would think that
many retail investors are soon going to be staring up into the eyes of their
friendly financial advisor saying the very same thing. Et tu, Koolaid
drinker?
On Dec. 4, 2015, the COT report revealed that Commercial traders in the
Crimex Gold pit had reduced shorts over a six-week period from 166,000 net
short on Oct. 15 to a paltry 2,911 contracts net short that day, making it
the tiniest short position in over a decade and a half and an incredible BUY
signal which I captured in a) the Dec. 4 email note and b) the GDX/GDXJ ETF's
and NUGT/JNUG calls I bought over the next three days. The rest is history.
An 82% rip in the HUI off the Jan. 19 regurgitation/capitulation lows and a
23% rip in gold YTD now turned the financial blogosphere into a large
ravenous pack of salivating bulls all scrambling to claim the crown as the
"Kings of Gold." The tires on the Gold Bandwagon are now as flat as
an October hay-wagon's as TV celebrity after TV celebrity is only too happy
to opine about their "call" on gold and all their (old and dated)
reasons for owning it.
However, as you can see from the chart posted above, the Commercials
traders have now done a complete 180-degree turn from the bullish
short-covering of Dec. 4, an event I noted back in the third week of February
when the aggregate net short position reported by the Commercials came in at
131,984. I decided then to refrain from any new longs and in fact telegraphed
the fact that I would probably be looking at reductions and some hedges if
that number continued to erode. On Feb. 26, the number came in at net short
163,149 to which I remarked. "This is a very bearish number," as
price continued to rise from $1,235 to $1,265/oz and the bandwagon began to
appear. As we moved into the pre-PDAC week, I published my report entitled
"Quietly
Climbing Aboard the New Golden Bull" but as much as I was (and am)
thrilled at the arrival of the new multiyear bull market, I told everyone to
exercise "CAUTION" due to the rapidly escalating shorts being
feathered out by the bullion bank behemoths. Sure enough, on March 4, the
Friday before PDAC, gold hit $1,280/oz the same day that aggregate Commercial
shorts hit 171,431 as bullish commentary in the MSM hit fever pitch. Finally,
two days after the end of the 2016 PDAC love fest, the Commercials lowered
the boom, which was actually from the Tuesday trading session right in the
MIDDLE of PDAC with the omnipotent delivery of that massive 195,372 net short
position-19,537,200 ounces of synthetic, fantasy-world, never-to-be-delivered,
not-required-to-be-accounted-for "gold."
Needless to say, here we are on the exact day known all too well by Roman
Emperors as "The Ides of March" and the Crimex futures have just
printed $1,229, which marks it as a $57 smash since last Thursday evening and
undoubtedly a well-cemented "short term top" and as much as I would
like to be strutting around, football in hand, in the end zone, ready to do
my "Oogie Shuffle" and do a "spike-the-ball-in-your-face"
type move, I am instead sitting at my desk, nauseated by the abject
criminality of this exercise. I'm also astounded how many "portfolio
managers" being paid tens of millions of dollars in fees and bonuses
every year were lured into this Arachnidan web by the momentum-creating
antics of the bullion banks and their MSM brethren. Ladies and gentlemen,
this was a complete and total set-up from the Get-Go and it was as if I was
watching a beer bottle falling off a table in slow motion after a night of
debauchery, too wasted to lunge for it and too laid back to care, as the
Commercials played out Act III, Scene I of the assassination of the emperor
with their usual deftness and sleight of hand.
We had four weeks to prepare for this event and some did and some did not,
but what is for certain is that you absolutely MUST take advantage of any
rebound/recoveries in the gold price and in the HUI by buying protection or
by reducing exposure. It took six weeks back in October-November for the
washing machine to go through the entire wash-rinse-spin cycle so that could
easily take us to the month of May before any daylight is seen on the
horizon. You can take to the bank the likelihood that Goldman Sachs will be
mobilizing the heavy earth-moving equipment shortly in order to validate that
"sub-$1,000" forecast from last week and of all the thieves in the
building, they are the ones that have the magic pixie dust when it comes to
sprinkling fear and loathing in ANY market and we should FULLY expect such.
So when you look at the picture at the top, and you see that poor besieged
emperor lying on his back preparing to get hacked to pieces by members of a
conspiracy most ignoble, think of the public mutual funds, pension funds,
sovereign wealth funds, private investors and the average mainstream
speculator in the same position, powerless, unarmed and up against the
unregulated, SEC-sanctioned, sword-wielding bullion banks that can sell 5% of
annual world production via the Crimex in a five-week window of infamy. At a
net short position of over 195,000 contracts, the Commercials are fully armed
for another big payday, so I trust we have all acted accordingly. If not, I
will see your "et tu brute" and raise you three "caveat
emptors".
Originally trained during the inflationary 1970s, Michael Ballanger is a graduate of Saint Louis University
where he earned a Bachelor of Science in finance and a Bachelor of Art in
marketing before completing post-graduate work at the Wharton School of Finance.
With more than 30 years of experience as a junior mining and exploration
specialist, as well as a solid background in corporate finance, Ballanger's
adherence to the concept of "Hard Assets" allows him to focus the
practice on selecting opportunities in the global resource sector with
emphasis on the precious metals exploration and development sector. Ballanger
takes great pleasure in visiting mineral properties around the globe in the
never-ending hunt for early-stage opportunities.
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All images/charts courtesy of Michael Ballanger