More beans on the hot seat :-) 10:45p EDT Thursday, June 8, 2000
Dear Friend of GATA and Gold:
You'll see from GATA Chairman Bill Murphy's comments below that GATA now is raising serious questions about what is going on with gold being shipped out of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and how it is being accounted for. We just might have a few government agencies going at it before long.
The Internet site of the Martin Armstrong Defense Fund has grown and I encourage you to check it out. As you may recall, Armstrong is the financial adviser whose lawyers were taken away by the government just as he began to talk about various market manipulations. The site is at:
armstrongdefensefund.org
Please post this as seems useful.
CHRIS POWELL, Secretary/Treasurer Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee Inc.
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GATA MAKES MORE TROUBLE AT THE NY FED
By Bill Murphy, Chairman Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee Inc. Thursday, June 8, 2000
Gold was trashed late today by Hannibal Cannibal Chase Bank just as it looked like it would make a run to go positive for the trading session.
On the positive side, we received word that hedge funds were indeed going long. If that trend continues, the open interest (which was up 1,300 contracts yesterday) should continue to build as the gold price moves higher.
On that note, tomorrow is a very important day. August gold closed right above its 200-day moving average, which is moving higher. The 15-day moving average is about to cross its 40-day moving average to the upside The last two times that happened were the spikes up in September last year and February this year.
More from Agent W about the Federal Reserve Bank of New York gold moving out of the country. Reg Howe covered this issue in an essay last month, "The Fed: Up to its Earmarks in Gold Price Manipulation." A quote from Reg:
"What is immediately apparent from this chart is that disbursements of gold from the earmarked accounts of foreign central banks and other foreign official agencies at the New York Federal Reserve Bank, shown in blue, are included in exports of non-monetary gold as reported by the Commerce Department, shown in red. Plainly there is no realistic sense in which these withdrawals of foreign official gold from the Fed are U.S. exports. Possibly they are reported this way by mistake, perhaps reflecting the fact that non-monetary gold cannot be distinguished from monetary gold at the points where exports are measured. Intentionally or not, the effect is to gild the export numbers, making the trade balance appear better than it is."
GATA's Agent W has been doggedly on the case to find out what is going on here and what it might mean. This is a follow up to last night's dispatch:
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From: Agent W To: Bill, Reg, Chris June 8, 2000
"Called the staffer at Census who is assigned to investigate and answer my letter to pass on my news and the names of my contacts at the Fed and Commerce. She confirms that there is a clear discrepancy and that this is a serious matter.
"It probably won't be resolved quickly because of the different government agencies involved, but she thinks my providing her with my contacts will help. She seems quite motivated. I note that this staffer has been able to get some answers and stir up interest from Customs, whereas Customs does not return my phone calls.
"She also believes that a key issue may be that the Fed considers the gold vault a warehouse but Customs does not. If the gold vault is a warehouse, the customer files the import documents; if not, then the Fed must do so."
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>From www.LeMetropleCafe.com member and GATA contributor Carlos:
"I was watching CNBC this morning, and Bill Seidman, their chief commentator, was being asked some questions over the phone. One viewer asked him if U.S. taxpayers would have to bail out J.P. Morgan and Goldman Sachs, as they were shorting gold and were tremendously exposed should the price rise.
"Bill answered very politely that he didn't know that those guys were short, but that he doubted the taxpayers would pay the bill, since Goldman Sachs and J.P. Morgan were protected by the FDIC.
"I think the word is spreading around real fast."
-END-
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