Not being much of a conspiracy theorist, last week’s hearing by the CFTC (Commodities Futures Trading Commission) on futures market trading for metals was a subject of some interest to me, but the news flow since that time has been rather remarkable – if for no other reason that none of the news seems to be flowing in the mainstream media.
In fact, a search at the Wall Street Journal on “Gensler” (CFTC Chairman Gary Gensler would surely be included in any report) produces only this one item from before the hearing.

You’d think that, if a news organization that normally finds time to report on the most arcane of financial market goings-on saw fit to publish a story before the hearing was held, they’d also figure it was worthwhile to let their readers know what happened at the hearing.
Apparently not.
The one story($) that the search did turn up quickly gets to the heart of the argument against imposing position size limits for metals markets – the real question that the hearing was attempting to answer:
Imposing new speculative trading limits on metals futures contracts is unwarranted and could have an adverse impact on U.S. markets, some exchange and bank officials will tell the Commodity Futures Trading Commission Thursday.
Later in the story they mention that GATA (Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee) chairman Bill Murphy was planning to speak though, curiously, they failed to mention him by name and then, even more curiously, they followed this mention up with almost three times as many words bashing those, like Murphy, who allege manipulation in these markets.
One of the staunchest believers in the allegations of gold manipulation—the chairman of the Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee—will testify as well.
But others, including the CME’s Mr. LaSala and John J. Lothian, a commodity trading advisor, futures broker and the head of a well-known markets newsletter, will urge the CFTC not to pay attention to arguments that there has been manipulation.
“Those who believe gold and silver markets are manipulated to keep prices low are nothing more than politically opportunistic rent seekers in my book,” Mr. Lothian planned to say. “They are parasites on the body public profiting from selling fear and seeking political change that will benefit their world view and related market position.”
Now, that’s some stunningly unbalanced reporting on a subject that, admittedly, anybody anywhere near Wall Street probably doesn’t want to contemplate – that markets are rigged. But, in the broader scheme of things, wouldn’t it be better to just let “those crazy gold bugs” have their day and be discredited once and for all if they really are as nutty as the WSJ would have us believe?
Well, if you read the Wall Street Journal, you’ll never know what happened at the hearing and whether the CFTC paid any attention to them, but, if you look elsewhere, you’ll read about all kinds of interesting developments during and after the meeting.
Here’s a partial list:
GATA’s evidence of silver and gold manipulation at CFTC hearing – Mineweb
CFTC Gets Facts of Bullion Manipulation – Numismaster
JP Morgan Chase Caught Manipulating Gold & Silver Market – Firedog Lake
Whistleblower Speaks Out On JP Morgan Market Manipulation – Jesse’s Cafe
Former Goldman Analyst Confirms LMBA Gold Market Is “Paper Gold” Ponzi – Zero Hedge
Whistleblower in Silver Manipulation Struck by Hit and Run Car In London – Jesse’s Cafe
King World Interview with Andrew Maguire the Silver Market ‘Whistleblower’ – Jesse’s Cafe
King Interview With GATA On The Biggest Gold Manipulation Story Disclosed – Zero Hedge
Now, of all the sources above, the Mineweb story is probably the most mainstream and they had a few interesting observations and conclusions:
Some observers feel that the Gold Anti Trust Association (GATA’s) long held views on a conspiracy by some major banks and government entities to manipulate precious metals prices are off-target, but the latest evidence produced by GATA chairman Bill Murphy in open testimony at the CFTC hearing is compelling assuming the source material is accurate.
The evidence came in the form of a series of emails, and accompanying commentary, from a London metals trader, Andrew Maguire, who contacted GATA on March 23rd regarding alleged rigging of the precious metals markets by JP Morgan among others, through shorting the markets around key economic data releases, describing in detail how this is achieved. Maguire, Murphy contends, informed the CFTC enforcement division of this market manipulation ahead of the release of farm payroll data in February this year and set out not only how the manipulation would be achieved two days in advance, but also sent real time emails to the CFTC investigators as the alleged manipulation was taking place. According to Murphy the metals prices followed the scenario precisely – something which he felt could not be predicted without prior knowledge of the manipulation of the markets by major players with huge financial clout.
Now, why couldn’t the Wall Street Journal report something like that?
It seems to be a rather important development and one that anyone even remotely related to the gold and silver market would surely be interested in.
For the first time ever, a whistleblower has stepped forward citing specifics of a market rigging as it was occurring in real time.
Now, there were more than a few strange goings on at the hearing, one of which was that the video feed went dead just as Bill Murphy was about to detail the Maguire story for the CFTC. Here’s the video (that no one was able to see at the time) in which Murphy details Maguire’s charges that massive short positions by HSBC and JP Morgan aimed out flushing out longs occur regularly and predictably, in a coordinated fashion.
The fact that whistleblower Maguire was struck by a hit and run driver in London the next day adds to the intrigue. He was apparently not injured badly as he was able to do an interview with Eric King a couple days later in which he sounds completely sane (see link from above).
Of course, the case that the “gold bugs” should be ignored wasn’t helped by Jeff Christian of the CPM Group clumsily defending the current system and, in the process, essentially, admitting that there is little or no actual precious metal backing the trading in London – that it’s strictly a “paper market”, which, to most people makes no sense.
How can you have “price discovery” on a futures market when few of the sellers have anything to sell?
Patrick Heller at Numismaster (see link from above) put it this way:
In effect, the commissioners were told that almost all of the trading activities on the London exchange were merely settled by paper for paper, not for physical metals as the exchange supposedly requires. Further, the commissioners were told that it was impossible for the London exchange to ever deliver all the gold and silver owed to the owners of contracts.
After the hearing, GATA publicly released copies of Maguire’s e-mails with the CFTC. Murphy also revealed that Maguire had recorded all of his telephone conversations with the CFTC without asking for their permission to do so. This is legal to do in Britain, but such recordings cannot legally be provided to other parties. GATA is currently working to ensure that these recorded conversations can be legally released to the public.
You’d think there’s something in here that the Wall Street Journal would have found newsworthy.
Reuters filed this report after the conclusion of the hearing and they too failed to mention anything other than opposition to any idea of position limits in metal markets. A Google News search on “Gensler” confirms the virtual blackout by the mainstream news media, the only source of information coming from, well, blogs just like mine.
You’d think the mainstream media would at least acknowledge that something happened.
The real problem here is that the CFTC is being put in a tough position.
There is widespread agreement that something needs to be done to limit trading position sizes in energy markets because, when Goldman Sachs or some hedge fund start driving the price of oil to $120 or $150 a barrel, then gasoline prices surge past $4 a gallon and, not only is this bad for the economy, but, people are understandably miffed and they start complaining to their Congressmen.
But, if, as Maguire charges, big banks like HSBC and JP Morgan use these same kinds of concentrated positions on the short side for gold and silver in an attempt to keep prices down amid growing troubles in a world full of paper money, it would seem inconsistent (as a minimum) to not take action here as well.
If what Maguire says is true, it’s really the same thing – one or two players who are so big and so powerful that they can move prices whenever and wherever they want to, profiting all along the way.









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At least they are writing about at the Huffington Post:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/nathan-lewis/its-ponzimonium-in-the-go_b_519893.html
Thanks! I hadn’t seen that one yet.
Tim,
I am a calm observer myself but the hit and run event (london police still have NO COMMENT on the man caught!?) does not help things in my mind. Plenty of doclosure today (FED maiden lane assets worth 1/2 what was paid, silver manipulation) that should open some eyes.
Personally, I think this is a seminal event. It will take a while for it to sink in and, at some point, the mainstream media other than the New York Post will cover it, but the events of last week were a wakeup call that a lot of people heard.
That being said, look for silver to get pummeled tomorrow………..
i have always suspected the gold bugs were lunatics choking on sour grapes. but after seeing bill murphy testify, i’ve completely changed my mind. this is going to be the news story of the century.
for anyone who missed it, here are the cliff’s notes: the bullion banks front-run the gold and silver markets for enormous personal profit by utilizing what is essentially a naked short position ONE HUNDRED TIMES larger than the supply of actual metal they own.
the implications are staggering. if this isn’t securities fraud, then the term ’securities fraud’ has no meaning. this makes madoff look like a kid stealing a pack of gum from a drug store. this is yet more proof that the government regulators are either hopelessly incompetent, or that they are corrupt and willing accomplices in what is essentially a long standing criminal enterprise.
anyone who thinks this story is going to go away is nuts. i used to think the GATA folks were crazies. not anymore.
naked short positions that can’t be accurately measured or even accounted for can drive the price of anything up (when they’re taken of or when the hedge is hedged) or down (when the short position comes on). this is called securities fraud. and it is supposed to be illegal. it ends when people start taking physical possession – which is why it can’t work in the oil markets.
it also ends when owners of paper – who think they own physical metal – come to find that they are merely ‘unsecured creditors’ and have basically been tricked by the bullion banks. offers of ‘cash settlement’ will never be able to fend off the coming swarm of lawyers and past buyers of physical metal who want what they believe is theirs.
Naked shorting is simply fraud. It’s selling something you don’t own, taking the buyer’s money, and never delivering the goods.
Naked shorting shares is counterfeiting shares.
The SEC and DTCC allowing share counterfeiting is cooking the books.
Naked shorting gold and silver is counterfeiting money.
The Fed, the US Treasury and the CFTC allowing naked shorting of gold and silver is cooking the books.
The dollar is the unit of account for all economic calculations.
They have cooked the books.
Which books?
All of them.
I also felt that the credibility of GATA improved dramatically after last week’s hearing and the press blackout really is disturbing. Between Christian’s admission that there’s no metal to back the trades and what seems to be a bonafide whistleblower in Maguire, this may be the beginning of a major change in how people see these markets —- a change that will probably see metal prices go much higher over the medium-term.
I’ve read all the very-excellent reports from this amazing hearing. I’m a gold bug myself.
One thing mentioned in the hearing was that gold derivatives were NECESSARY. The rationale was that paper gold absorbed huge amounts of money that would otherwise cause inflation. Suppose 99 % of the $ 5.4 ? trillion that is invested in paper gold were to leave the market somehow. The price of physical gold would explode. Same for silver.
The problem is that gold and oil are flat even on a graph with only a couple of recent bumps. While I wouldn’t cry of my gold were re-priced higher, A commensurate move up in oil would strangle the majority.
Gold production is diminishing. The recent innovations by PETROBRAS and Russian oil have found staggering amounts of oil. Proven gas reserves are climbing by “centuries” every year.
Possibly, the link between gold and oil will break.
As far as the press blackout. In a backhand way, it proves that the bullion banks have something to worry about. The same is true for the “almost” naked short last year that had to be covered by British central bank…. same as the 25 % cash premium paid to a very large investor who demanded physical. The mint shortages too point to a lack of un-allocated PM.
A half dozen sovereign wealth funds pulled their gold out of London and New York. If they’re afraid that something might happen to their gold, I see no reason to disagree with them.
The PTB in the West would not like to see oil go to $ 250 a barrel. It remains to be seen if they will muzzle Gensler…. maybe arrange a hit-and-run, better yet, a plane crash.
In my opinion, the MSM news blackout on the huge naked short is because the issue of gold and silver manipulation has major NATIONAL SECURITY implications. Not to mention the fact that the powerz such as JPM and GOVSACHS control BIGGOVCORP and MSM.
[...] an increase in investigative stories concerning manipulation of gold prices with paper contracts on the world’s futures exchanges that sound plausible, this blogger took a closer look at the European Central Bank’s [...]
[...] an increase in investigative stories concerning manipulation of gold prices with paper contracts on the world’s futures exchanges that sound plausible, this blogger took a closer look at the European Central Bank’s [...]
[...] an increase in investigative stories concerning manipulation of gold prices with paper contracts on the world’s futures exchanges that sound plausible, this blogger took a closer look at the European Central Bank’s [...]
[...] an increase in investigative stories concerning manipulation of gold prices with paper contracts on the world’s futures exchanges that sound plausible, this blogger took a closer look at the European Central Bank’s [...]
[...] Media Blackout of CFTC hearings Timiacono.com reports that Gold, Silver, the CFTC & Conspiracy Theories. [...]
[...] Media Blackout of CFTC hearings Timiacono.com reports that Gold, Silver, the CFTC & Conspiracy Theories. [...]
Awesome site you’ve got here. Will keep coming reading these good articles you are going to write. Maybe you want to check out the commodity brokerage website.
Nice video production! I was just wondering if you used avid media composer? Great work!
I offer for the evaluation of those with open minds (if any such exist) The Silver Stealers nonfiction documentary. Remember Glenn Ford’s film “The Brotherhood of the Bell?” People compare that fiction to the real Skull & Bones Society of Yale University. But Skull & Bones is a mere minor conduit into The Pilgrims Society which maintains an astonishingly low profile while running so much of world affairs behind the scenes. This is the documentary ignored by Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee (its leadership, not its rank and file); ask them why, after reading (not “skimming”) it. The Silver Stealers penetrates to the heart of the problems in precious metals—a secret organization of intermarried aristocrats stands behind it all. GATA is to be blamed for not spreading the word when they could have helped so very much!