Even The CME Is Getting Tired Of Silver Manipulation

Everyone has seen them: those “inexplicable” bouts of furious selling in gold and silver, coming out of nowhere with no news or catalyst, which serve no rational price discovery purposes (because no normal seller takes out the bid stack, telegraphs a massive sell order and executes at the worst possible price) but merely are there to reprice the market higher or, as happens in 90% of the cases, lower.

In fact, look no further than what happened first thing this morning, when an unknown seller, smashed all stops in one big sale, and took silver to its lowest price for 2014.

There was no news, so one can’t even blame a rogue algo overreacting to some headline and taking momentum ignition strategies a little far.

In short: this was a premeditated and deliberate selling of silver with one simple purpose: push and reprice silver lower.

But this is nothing new: precious metal traders, especially those who are on the other side of the table of the BIS’ Mikael Charoze or Benoit Gilson, and countless other commercial banks, are all too aware of this behavior and they take it for granted.

No, the real surprise is that suddenly none other than the CME is getting worred that manipulation this blatant is finally chasing regular retail traders away who are tired of being fleeced on a daily basis, leaving central banks and a few “fixing” banks to trade only with each other, which is not acceptable – after all it is the muppets’ money that is fair game, not that of other cartel members.

According to Reuters, the CME, which at present has price fluctuation limits for futures contracts in some energy, agricultural commodities and financial products, but not for its precious and base metals products, is considering introducing daily limits on gold and silver futures.

“We don’t have price limits in gold and silver. That’s something that we are looking into,” Miguel Vias, CME Group’s director of metal products, said in a panel discussion at an industry event, in response to a question about how the exchange protects investors from excessive volatility.

The biggest concern for the exchange is the array of sophisticated trading programs that are capable of significantly pushing the market higher or lower, Vias said.

Oh, so it is the programs? And who programs these… programs? Could it be people? And perhaps one should look into whether actual people are ordering the programs to “significantly push the market higher or lower.”

It gets better. While the clueless hacks which appear on TV speculate about plunging trading volumes, anyone with half a brain knows why most have shunned capital markets – people know the market is one rigged, manipulated casino, and never more so than now. But while until now this mostly impacted the stock and bond market, it is now moving over to gold and silver.

“Unusually big moves and the fears of price “slippage” – the difference between the price at which a market player wants to execute an order and the price at which they are able to do so – have turned some gold and silver futures investors away, he said.  In the first four months of the year, COMEX gold futures volume dropped 10 percent from a year ago…

But the best part is this:

The possible move reflects growing concern at the largest U.S. exchange of futures and options about big bouts of buying or selling that have caused huge fluctuations in prices without any apparent fundamental reason.

Funny, one could almost call huge fluctuations in price without a reason… manipulation. But better not, because what little confidence in a rigged system exists, may promptly dissolve even further.

Still, while this is merely the latest alleged case when the CME promises to clean up its act, we can be confident nothing will happen: “support for setting limits on price moves does not appear to be universal. “I think the breaks in trading are good, but I wouldn’t support fixing price moves,” said one U.S. trader.”

Could said trader be manning the NY Fed trading desk at Liberty 33?

Ironically, there may be some hope, though not out of the CME. It appears the cannibalization in the PM manipulation industry is so bad, there may no longer be any silver “fixers” left. Also from Reuters, we learn that Deutsche Bank’s exit from the London precious metal fixes will leave just two banks running a century-old system that sets the global silver price, likely stirring the debate about regulation of one of the most volatile commodity markets.

The bank’s decision on Tuesday to resign its seat ends an unsuccessful four-month search for a buyer, as U.S. lawsuits alleging gold price-rigging by the five banks that set the benchmark turned potential suitors cold, sources said.

“You can’t have a silver fixing with just two people, that’s a bit of a nonsense really,” a London-based precious metals trader said, adding just two participants would restrict liquidity and competition.

 

“It would just be two people talking to each other. I think the regulator should be stepping up a little bit here.”

It should, but like the CME, it most likely won’t:

Shortly before news of Deutsche’s withdrawal on Tuesday, Britain’s financial watchdog, the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA), said it could intervene if there were too few participants in commodity benchmarks such as gold and silver.

 

“If there is a risk of dislocation because people are withdrawing and we think that breaches or is a risk to our objectives, then we would set that as one of our activities but it is not entirely straightforward,” head of enforcement and financial crime Tracey McDermott said on Tuesday.

And who can possibly forget the CFTC’s own “quest” (or Bart “rotating door” Chilton‘s haircut for that matter) to root out evil silver manipulators (most of which just happen to be its superiors), which found nothing wrong.

In a five-year probe, the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission investigated allegations that some of the world’s biggest bullion banks including JPMorgan Chase & Co distorted silver futures prices.

 

After 7,000 staff hours of investigation, the U.S. commodity regulator found no evidence of wrongdoing and dropped the probe last September.

 

The banks faced similar accusations in a long-running class action antitrust lawsuit that was dismissed at the end of last month by a federal appeals court.

No, investors – at least those who are not close to the reserve money system – are on their own.

Whatever the outcome of the latest scrutiny, some users, including mining companies, which hedge production against the benchmark, may have little choice for now but to rely on it even with just two members.

 

Whether it is good or bad or if it is down to two members, we have to use it,” said Ounesh Reebye, vice president of metal sales at mining company Silver Wheaton, which is expected to produce 36 million ounces of silver this year.

Perhaps it would be best to just have one gold and silver “price fixer” left, the Federal Reserve. That way at least some integrity to an otherwise broken and manipulated market will be restored. Until then, watch as trading volumes slowly but surely trickle down to zero as everyone finally realizes what we have been saying since 2009 – in a market so manipulated, so rigged, so artificial, a far better and enjoyable option for investors around the world is just to take their money to Las Vegas.




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Cops Harass Wheelchair-Bound Vet, Take His Cellphone Out of Spite, Arrest Him on Probation Violation After Story Goes Viral

an hero copHealthcare through the Department of Veterans
Affairs (VA) is, for now, the closest the U.S. has to government
healthcare. Like with all things government, the VA has its own
police force. Like other police forces, they seem to have a problem
with being recorded, and disrespected.

Wheelchair-bound veteran Todd MacRae says VA police snatched his
phone from him while he was trying to record them. He says it all
started when he ordered VA cops to leave the room while he was
visiting his doctor. They were called when McRae got upset his
doctor didn’t accept his answer to a question about his drinking
habits. He had calmed down by the time they got there, and the
doctor said she could finish her appointment with McRae. Witness
what can happen when government and healthcare collides in the
worse way.  via Carlos Miller of
Photography is Not a Crime reports
:

They accused him of “disturbing the peace,” and ordered
him, along with his dog, to follow them downstairs to their office,
where they could cite them.

“I told them, ‘write me a ticket or shut the fuck up,’” he said,
acknowledging that he doesn’t hesitate to speak his mind to the
cops…

A week later, his 23-year-old daughter dropped him off for his
weekly blood tests, but because she had to attend class at the
local college, she left him two hours earlier than his
appointment.

So he entered the Starbucks on hospital property with his dog,
which is completely allowed, but then one of the cops from the
previous week entered, recognized him, and started hassling him
about his “vicious dog” not being muzzled.

The cop ordered him off the hospital under threat of trespass
arrest, which caused MacRae to miss his weekly appointment for his
blood tests that enables him to survive despite having more than 20
pieces of metal in his neck.

“I had to call my daughter to come pick me up and she had to leave
school,” the former construction worker said.

On Tuesday, he was at the hospital for another appointment, minding
his own business in front of the hospital, when a VA cop walks up
and begins hassling him about his dog.

Unlike the two prior incidents, MacRae began recording with his
phone, only for the cop to lie and say he was not allowed, then
eventually snatching it from him.

Among the problems with this story: state law doesn’t require
service dogs to wear muzzles. Neither is recording police against
the law in Virginia. Nevertheless, cops pointed to a federal statute
prohibiting unauthorized photography to issue him a citation. So
this story has government healthcare, police abuse, and the war on
terror.

Even worse, Carlos Miller reports McRae was arrested on a
probation violation stemming from a decade-old incident just hours
after story went live on Photography is Not a Crime. Read
more and watch the video McRae took
here
.

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When Nations Go Broke: Mob Justice

Submitted by Simon Black via Sovereign Man blog,

It was a scene just like out of the Wild West.

 

18-year-old David Moreyra had stolen a purse. And an angry mob gathered in broad daylight in Rosario, Argentina to lynch him.

 

It turns out that ‘mob justice’ is on the rise in Argentina, and Mr. Moreyra’s death was just one of more than a dozen recent instances.

Hundreds of years ago during the Age of Enlightenment, liberty-minded philosophers argued that governments could only derive their authority to govern by receiving consent of the governed.

And that the people would have to voluntarily surrender some of their freedoms to government in exchange for certain services (and protection of their other freedoms).

This idea has become twisted and mutated over time.

These days, the prevailing model is that [some] people pay taxes, and in exchange the government maintains a monopoly over a number of public services.

Security is one obvious example since, for most people, the local police force maintains a monopoly over citizen security.

Any high school economics student can tell you that most monopolies are terribly inefficient.

Yet this is what people have been indoctrinated to believe—that they need the government to protect them. And they’re willing to pay ever-increasing taxes to ensure the government can provide it.

In many cities and countries across the world, they’re even willing to give up their right to bear arms… to give up some personal freedom… in exchange for the government providing a generally inefficient service.

All of this is part of the modern social contract. And when nations go broke, this social contract breaks down.

Many of the public services that government has promised get curtailed, or cut entirely.

The people have held up their end of the bargain. They’ve traded in their freedoms and their income in exchange for services. But the government hasn’t held up theirs.

And because the government has a monopoly on many of these services, suddenly people find themselves without something they have come to depend on.

This is precisely what has happened in Argentina. As the economy continues to struggle from an absurd level of money printing, unemployment and inflation are both painfully high.

Many Argentines are desperate. Crime rates have soared. But the police are utterly worthless.

Once peaceful citizens have been driven to desperation as a result. They’re afraid… and they’re taking matters into their own hands, roaming the streets in lynch gangs.

This isn’t some neighborhood watch or citizen justice program.

They form these gangs out of desperation, signalling that Argentina’s social contract has completely disintegrated.

It’s a rather unfortunate regression for a society. Civilized people don’t form angry mobs to act as judge, jury, and executioner.

As I’ve long-written, there are consequences to destructive economic policy.

Central bankers cannot conjure infinite quantities of currency out of thin air, nor can politicians borrow more money just to pay interest on what they’ve already borrowed, all without consequence.

This is one of those consequences—a complete breakdown of the social contract, giving rise to something so Medieval as lynch gangs and mob justice.

Can it happen where you live? Maybe. No nation is immune to the social effects of economic decay (think Detroit, or even New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina…).

When every shred of data suggests that major western economies are decaying rapidly under the weight of excessive debt and paper currency, it’s foolish to presume that ‘it can’t happen here’.




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Jesse Walker on the Overreaching FCC

The Federal
Communications Commission has declared that some of the stories
aired on a Chicago radio station “were not, in fact, news stories.”
It proclaimed this not because the reports were deceptive or
otherwise inaccurate, but because of the distribution model the
journalists used to syndicate their reports. Reason‘s
Jesse Walker takes a look at the ruling and explains just what’s at
stake.

View this article.

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‘I Hope Jeb Runs,’ Says Dubya, Arizona Has Harsh New Revenge Porn Law, Pics of Oklahoma’s Satanic Statue: P.M. Links

  • “I hope Jeb runs” for president in
    2016 and he can “give
    me a call
    ” if he needs any political advice, George W. Bush
    said today. Hopefully that endorsement is enough reason for
    the GOP to run in the opposite direction.
  • Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer signed one of the nation’s harshest
    revenge
    porn
    ” laws yesterday. It is now a felony to “to intentionally
    disclose, display, distribute, publish, advertise or offer a
    photograph, videotape, film or digital recording of another person
    if the person knows or should have known that the depicted person
    has not consented to the disclosure.”
  • Sen. Harry Reid (D-Nev.) is using Donald Sterling’s racism
    controversy to
    rekindle his personal crusade
    to make the Washington Redskins
    change its name. Doesn’t this guy have anything better to do in his
    own jurisdiction? Pick another fight with some ranchers,
    perhaps?
  • Rep. Bennie Thompson (D-Miss.) recently called Supreme Court
    Justice Clarence Thomas an “Uncle Tom.” Thompson responded to
    backlash yesterday
    saying
    , “but I’m black.”
  • A Russian diplomat was detained in Ukraine today under
    suspicion of espionage
    . Ukraine also
    relaunched its military draft
    today in response to increased
    separatist violence.
  • Remember when a Satanic Temple in Oklahoma launched a campaign
    to get a goat-headed statue displayed on the front lawn of the
    statehouse? Here are the
    first pictures
    of the statue.

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t forget to sign
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updates for more content.

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Treasury Yields Tumble To 11-Month Lows; Stocks Hold Near Record Highs

It was not a Tuesday, and it was not a Fed day – so stocks closed red. Volume was dismal. The Russell 2000 tested its 200DMA once again (and bounced) but was unable to sustain that strength, ending notably weak today. Once again the biggest news was the continued collapse in Treasury yields as a combination of massive spec positioning short "because rates have to go up" and the ugly reality of macro weakness combined to send rates to 2014 lows (and 11-month lows for 30Y yields). The Dow's weakness meant it lost its gains for 2014. Despite ongoing USD weakness (driven by GBP and EUR strength), commodities traded lower with silver worst today (red for 2014), copper weak, and gold and oil flat to modestly lower. VIX was pummeled down to almost 13 midday (which makes perfect sense ahead of NFP – why would anyone hedge that?) but leaked higher as bond market reality set in during the afternoon. The ubiquitous very-late-day VIX slam pulled stocks higher in a buying panic but failed to get the S&P, Dow, or Russell green on the day.

 

 

Before we start on the day's action… take a moment to call the world's largest capital market "wrong"…

 

And a close up this week…

 

Stocks and AUDJPY were largely in sync today…

 

And VIX was pressured and then slammed into the close to ramp stocks to unch…

 

Look at the lower pane for a sense of participation in this rally… lower lower lower volume as we creep higher…

 

Stocks were mixed on the day… with Russell 2000 testing its 200dma and bouncing with a late-day buying panic…

 

High-Yield bond yields did not agree with stocks late day ramp…

 

But Treasuries weren't – all lower yields all day long…

 

Commodities all slid lower on the day – with Silver's big dump early being retraced…

 

Just look at this idiocy in Silver futures today…

 

 

Charts: Bloomberg




via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1iOokzC Tyler Durden

The Great(er Fool) Rotation: Who’s Buying… And Who’s Selling?

We could yarn on for hundreds of words discussing the ins and outs of falling volumes and record-er highs in US equity markets as Treasury bond yields collapse, macro- and micro-fundamental data slumps, and the total nonsense with regard to ‘cash on the balance sheets’ when it is all levered to the max. But when it comes to showing just who is buying the hope… and who is selling the hype, the following chart from BofAML sums it all upinstitutional clients sold the most since January and the 4th most on record in the last week as retail clients continued their buying streak.

 

Institutional clients are dumping equities off to retail clients… thank you very much…

 

Last week, during which the S&P 500 was down 0.1%, BofAML clients were net sellers of $1.5bn of US stocks following a week of net buying.

Net sales were chiefly due to institutional clients, who have now sold stocks for the last five consecutive weeks and are the biggest net sellers year-to-date. Net sales by this group last week were their largest since January and the fourth-largest in our data history (since 2008).

Hedge funds were net buyers for the fourth consecutive week, and private clients also continued their net buying streak.

 

Source: BofAML




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Improv Everywhere’s Silly Mannequin Stunt Gets Everybody Arrested

You dummies!Improve Everywhere describes itself as a prank
collective. You may remember seeing YouTube videos of them doing
things like putting on a musical
at a food court
(okay, that kind of stretches the boundaries of
“improv,” though) and starting the annual No
Pants Subway Ride
, which some may enjoy for reasons having
nothing to do with humor.

For their latest stunt, they got 40
people to dress up like mannequins
to contribute to the
modeling of fashions at The Gap on 5th Avenue in Manhattan. As
their video shows, the shoppers look amused and not remotely afraid
or concerned about folks wearing full body coverings to simulate
looking like mannequins. Security was not as amused and called 911
over the pretend dummies. Then the police came and arrested
everybody, providing a lovely image of pranksters dressed like
mannequins face down on the floor all over the store.

Improv Everywhere reports a happy ending, however. Once the
police found out what was going on, everybody was released and
allowed to leave. The cynic in me wonders if the video cameras
recording everything and the crowd that gathered to watch
contributed to the peaceful conclusion to the incident.

Watch below. Wouldn’t it be amusing to see a bunch of actors
dressed like cops go into a clothing store and try to arrest actual
mannequins? That stunt might not end quite as peacefully once the
police showed.

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Cincinnati Literally Barricading Roads to Try to Thwart Prostitutes


In covering U.S. sex work issues, I read
about a lot of stupid anti-prostitution initiatives. But
the latest from Cincinnati, Ohio, may just take the stupid cake.
Apparently, cops there don’t think the good citizens of Cincy need
to actually use certain major thoroughfares—or, if they do, too
bad. There is prostitution to deter, and if that
means literally barricading off roads
, so be it. 

The barricades, which police insist will be up for “less than
three months,” went up this week at three spots on McMicken Avenue,
near the University of Cincinnati. Police
say
previous efforts and “community applied pressure” have not
been enough to curb prostitution on the McMicken corridor, and
hence desperate measures are warranted.

From The Cincinnati Enquirer: 

A Jan. 9 prostitution-related homicide underscored the need for
immediate action, said District 1 Capt. Michael John.

… After the homicide, officers began walking the area and
interviewed the women, who work the street, John said. He said
officers tried to talk to them about getting out of
prostitution.

It doesn’t sound like they were very successful, which would
imply that the estimated 70- to 80-women regularly working the area
are actually choosing to do so. Naturally, police efforts to stop
them are being referred to as the McMicken PATH—that’s “People
Against Trafficking Humans” (emphasis
mine)—Project. 

Cincinnati is also currently considering plans to publish the
names of people convicted of prostitution-related offenses (through
either press releases sent to media outlets or on the city’s
government access TV channel), to notify offender’s spouses of
prostitution-related arrests, to create a court specifically for
prostitution offenses, to offer a “john school” as an alternative
punishment for those arrested (no word on exactly what that would
entail), and to increase fines for prostitution offenses. However,
for now, the city is settling for inconveniencing its populace and
driving more Johns to the Backpage.com ads. 

In a statement, the Cincinnati Police Department (CPD) promised
that the anti-prostitution barricades will “interrupt the cruising
cycle of those offenders frequenting the area for the purpose of
engaging the prostitutes” and “assist stakeholders in taking
ownership of the McMicken corridor.” While CPD “recognizes this
temporary measure may serve as an inconvenience to some,” the
efforts will ultimately “increase quality of life for all,” it
says. 

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