- Neues von GATA - R.Deutsch, 29.05.2001, 09:50
Neues von GATA
By Bill Murphy
www.LeMetropoleCafe.com
 Gold $277.50 down $1.50
 Silver $4.55 down 4 cents 
The Gold Cartel gave it everything they had trying to 
break gold down below the critical breakout $275 area 
on Friday. That major resistance point has become a 
major support point. 
The battle between the Gold Syndicate and the Gold 
Cartel should be in full fury this week. The cabal's 
desperation to keep gold from holding any kind of rally 
is beginning to show to the world. The Russian story 
was a blatant distortion of fact to orchestrate the 
price of gold lower. The latest: 
* * * 
Putin says Russia plans no gold sales for flood aid 
Yerevan, May 25 (Reuters) -- President Vladimir Putin 
said Russia had no plans to sell gold to raise funds to 
help victims of floods in Siberia`s Yakutiya region. 
Russian news agencies on Thursday quoted Putin as 
saying he intended to sign a decree on gold and diamond 
sales if a clear scheme was presented to him"to help 
people now on the streets." 
But Putin told a news conference in the Armenian 
capital, Yerevan, where he is attending a CIS security 
summit,"You misunderstood me." 
"I didn`t say that Russia intends to sell gold. I 
reacted positively to a proposal on the possibility of 
a mutual settlement of debt on a so-called gold loan 
that Yakutiya took from Russian authorities," he said. 
* * * 
The big news this week could come out of the Comex. All 
eyes will be on the June open interest, which stands at 
50,347 contracts with only two trading days left until 
first notice day on Thursday. 
While there are 827,000 ounces of gold in the Comex 
warehouses, only 367,000 ounces are eligible for 
delivery. Each June gold contract is 100 ounces, which 
means there are still more than 5 million ounces of 
longs that could compete for only 367,000 ounces of 
gold available for delivery. 
The June open interest is going to come down sharply in 
the next two days, but 50,000 contracts is a BIG number 
for this late into the delivery period, especially 
since the overall open interest is very small at only 
140,722 contracts. 
There may be some other kinds of bars around, but Comex 
requires 100-ounces bars with a.9999 fineness. Central 
bank bars are 400 ounces -- so one cannot just call on 
Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan to help out on this one. 
The last time there was a squeeze potential was in 
August 1999, which I reported on. Scotia bailed out the 
shorts by coming up with deliverable gold at a hefty 
premium. But the big news there was that the Federal 
Reserve called up Refco and asked it to request that 
its clients not stand for delivery -- the same Fed that 
continues to deny any interest in gold. 
The chronically high lease rates tell us that physical 
gold has become tighter all over the world. If there is 
a squeeze on the June Comex contract, it could set off 
some serious fireworks. 
I know of one Comex clearing firm that is standing for 
delivery for a client for some of the remaining Comex 
gold. 
If there is a squeeze coming, throw out all the 
technical jargon being bandied about. It will be 
meaningless. In 1994, I think, Phibro was planning a 
silver squeeze. They had it all figured out. They had 
tied up much of the available physical silver for 
delivery and purchased a huge amount of 520 silver 
calls. Silver expired at around $5 going into the 
option expiry. When silver closed at $5 the eve of the 
expiry, the option writers breathed a sigh of relief 
and were pleased with the money they had made off of 
Phibro. 
Their joy did not last very long. Phibro announced that 
it was exercising its 520 calls. The next day the price 
of silver went berserk, way up. The shorts were caught 
with their pants down and were slaughtered. 
The gold market is very tight. Anything can happen from 
here on. 
It is not an everyday occurrence to get letters from 
the White House. My eyes surely lit up on Saturday when 
I saw the White House envelope. This is the second one 
from Lawrence Lindsey, economic adviser to The 
president, to GATA in three months. This means that the 
Bush administration is taking our allegations very 
seriously. President Bush's economic adviser has better 
things to do than to write to me. 
I am convinced that the new Republican administration 
is either ending the gold fraud or tying to figure out 
how to do so without creating a financial debacle that 
was handed off by the Clinton administration. 
I found the date on the letter, May 30, to be most 
peculiar. Could it have anything to do with what Bob 
Chapman reported -- that Greenspan gave the bullion 
dealers until to the end of May to clean up their 
participation in the Clinton administration's rigging 
of the gold price? 
Something tells me this letter to GATA is most 
important. It certainly provides cover for the Bush 
administration, indicating that it is behaving 
deliberately but with market awareness, for it surely 
has to know what is coming. However, the new 
administration really has no choice but to gradually 
expose the scandal or take the blame itself down the 
road. If it does so, the problem will be even bigger as 
the gold loans grow by 1,000-2,000 tonnes a year to 
meet the natural supply/demand deficit. 
The administration's timing could not be better if it 
wants to pay back the Democrats for winning over 
Senator Jeffords and taking control of the U.S. Senate. 
One thing for sure. Word is out about the manipulation 
of the gold market all over the world. 
GATA supporter Jay Taylor in his J. Taylor's Gold & 
Technology Stocks Weekly Telephone Hotline reported the 
following in yesterday's dispatch to subscribers: 
* * * 
Watch the Dollar for an Indication of Doom 
On March 6 and 7 there was a meeting of top Russian 
politicians, bankers, and economists in Moscow. 
Sponsored by an agency of the Russia government, the 
meeting focused on the U.S. economy. The conference 
attracted some 200 investment bankers, scholars, 
diplomats, economists, and members of the Russian 
parliament. The two main concerns addressed at the 
conference were the following: 
1) If the U.S. economy crashes, how does the rest of 
the world keep from crashing too? 
2) Given the ever-more-obvious weaknesses in the U.S. 
economy, what can Europe and the industrialized world 
do to achieve a measure of independence? 
The Russian conference, which of course was not even 
mentioned in the U.S. press, is just another example of 
a growing awareness around the world that something is 
terribly wrong with the global economy and that an 
overvalued U.S. dollar is at the heart of the problem. 
Interestingly, the manipulation of the U.S. gold 
markets by the Fed, Goldman Sachs, and Robert Rubin was 
openly discussed at the Russian conference. Ironically, 
the scholars at the Russian conference appeared to have 
a clearer idea that the U.S. economy is in trouble and 
why than do establishment U.S. analysts, who seem to 
know less about free markets than do the Russians. 
Someone is telling our media not to cover the gold 
manipulation story. 
After Ron Insanna covered it initially when Bill Murphy 
launched GATA, the U.S. press has marginalized any of 
us who stand up for GATA on the merits of its 
arguments. I think that may be about to change, but for 
now, the merits of the GATA case are simply not being 
given the light of day in America, though GATA is 
credibility overseas. 
The strength in the gold shares on Friday was striking. 
Volume in the general stock market was the lightest of 
the year, yet the volume in the gold shares was very 
heavy in a rising gold share market that diverged from 
a weak bullion market. Physical gold was lower to 
sharply lower all day. The senior gold shares barely 
blinked and were firm all day. The XAU finished at 
60.99, up 1.66 or 2.8 percent, while the general market 
sold off. The Gold Cartel dropped gold $20 from its 
explosion highs, but the shares are not far off their 
highs. A very positive sign. 
It is nice to see gold companies like Claimstaker 
Resources and Samex show their support for GATA. I have 
met both companies' CEOs -- Nick Ferris of Claimstaker 
and Jeff Dahl of Samex. Both are first-class guys and 
know their stuff. 
http://www.claimstakerresources.com/index2.html 
http://www.samex.com 
As long-time Cafe members know, a good deal of my 
investment funds are tied up in Golden Star Resources. 
Someone keeps bopping it down on rallies. Must be a 
stale long who wants out. That is not uncommon, as many 
money managers who invested in gold shares have been 
fired. Their holdings are often inherited. The new 
money manger who has no interest in gold or goldshares 
usually waits for rallies like we just had to sell. 
GSR CEO Peter Bradford is doing a marvelous job in 
these very tough times (an understatement) for 
junior/exploration gold companies. 
"DENVER, May 24 /PRNewswire/ -- Golden Star Resources 
Ltd. is pleased to announce that it has reached an 
agreement with Prestea Gold Resources Limited that 
paves the way for the acquisition of the Prestea 
surface concession in Ghana." 
It looks like GSR will pick up five to 10 years' more 
of gold supply to feed its mill. This is very important 
as this mill in Ghana makes the company cash-flow 
positive at around $275 gold. That supports its 
maintenance its superb gold exploration finds in the 
Guyana Shield. 
All I can say is that you know the kind of analysis 
that Frank Veneroso does. Few are more thorough. Golden 
Star Resources is his No. 1 stock pick. It is a steal 
at these prices. 
-END-
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