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iShares Silver Trust SLV

The investment seeks to reflect generally the performance of the price of silver. The Trust seeks to reflect such performance before payment of the Trusts expenses and liabilities. It is not actively managed. The Trust does not engage in any activities designed to obtain a profit from, or to ameliorate losses caused by, changes in the price of silver.


ARCA:SLV - Post by User

Bullboard Posts
Post by svosteveon May 02, 2011 6:12pm
632 Views
Post# 18519771

Is The SLV Wired To Blow?

Is The SLV Wired To Blow?https://acrossthestreetnet.wordpress.com/2011/04/29/is-the-slv-is-wired-to-blow/

Mark McHugh

Is The SLV Wired To Blow?

In Government, Leveraged ETF, Mary Schapiro, Open Thread, SEC, Silver, stocks finance on Friday, April 29, 2011 at 8:13 pm

I’m not real big on suspense, so I’ll tell you upfront, I thinkso. Once again, we may be about to find out what happens whenregulators are asleep at the switch.

As of this writing there are 364 million shares of SLV outstanding. In the past five trading days (April 25 – 29) more than 755 million shareshave been traded, and get this, more than 10 million ounces ofsilver were taken from the trust between the 26th and the 28th, takingavailable shares with them. From Stockhouse.com :

Note: Stockhouse.comis the only free website that I know of that accurately tracks thenumber of ETF shares outstanding and changes (wish I could say the sameof my broker). Enter the ETF ticker with the suffix “.SO”

At what point does trading volume relative to existing shares become unbelievable?

Information on institutional holdings of ETF shares is also hard tofind. but according to nasdaq.com, 86 million shares of SLV are held byinstitutions, but that does not include any holdings reported sinceApril 1, 2011. And speaking of missing data, does anybody know where China Investment Corp’s 13F‘s are? Thesovereign wealth giant filed its initial holdings with the SEC onFebruary 5, 2010, but no additional data has been released. The SECrequires the form to be filed within 45 days of the quarter’s end.

The point is that the SLV has become one of the most heavily tradedinstruments on our exchanges and there is an all too finite number ofshares. There’s at least some evidence that the SECs institutionalholdings data is outdated and/or incomplete. What happens when all theshares are spoken for? If it hasn’t happened already (I suspect ithas), it should soon…..

Then what?

Will the SEC suspend sales of the SLV? Will the SLV start trading at huge premiums to NAV? Will the SEC even notice?

I don’t know about you, but I’m going with “SEC will never notice,”because they have no mechanism in place to ensure “shares owned” doesn’texceed shares outstanding (remember Mary Schapiro’s only qualificationto Chair the SEC is her inability to recognize a Ponzi).

Obviously if SLV starts trading at huge premiums, it isn’t trackingthe price of silver anymore. It will have a market dynamic untoitself. Suspending sales until more silver is deposited with the trustwill immediately cause a run on physical silver the likes of which hasnever been seen before. The silver exchange on the COMEX will blow upin a matter of minutes, followed shortly thereafter by JP Morgan and theclass structure of western civilization. If you don’t know how tightthe silver supply is getting, take a peak at this chart from 24HOURGOLD:

Kudos to 24hourgold.com fordoing a better job tracking the rapidly vanishing supply of registeredsilver than the COMEX!!!! (Hope it’s OK I stole a screenshot).

To make matters even worse, SLV trades options. Lots and lots andlots of options. So when the shares outstanding are all sold, therewill be people with call options, who have bought the right to buyshares of SLV at a given price. Forcing cash settlement means the SLVno longer can claim to track the price of physical silver, because thepurchase of silver by an authorized participant to create the shares tocover the options would have surely moved the price of the metal.

So once again America, ignoring the grim reality of the situation isthe only logical course of action. The SEC knows all too well thatthat’s what pornn sites are for. So unless somebody posts this on ……

I’m sure that Tyler Durden’s instincts will be proven correct again, when he stated that Blackrock’s Kevin Feldman’s defense of the SLV wasa red flag in and of itself. Blackrock is the sponsor of the SLV, andKevin urged everyone to read the prospectus. That was probably not sucha good idea. Be extra careful when you try to download the prospectus,I got the following warning:

Comedy ensued after using Firefox (safe mode) to view the prospectus:

“The sponsor does not exercise day-to-day oversight over the trustee or the custodian”

Which seems to conflict with Kevin’s letter:

“AtBlackRock, we take the responsibility of protecting shareholderinterests very seriously and spend a lot of time constructing ouriShares products to help ensure they meet investor expectations.”

So in reality Blackrock takes protecting shareholders about asseriously as the US Department of Justice takes perjury. To his credit,Kevin did link to a list of bars the SLV holds in some vaults over inEngland. The list was prepared by JP Morgan, because if you can’t trustthem regarding silver, who can you trust? Rather than spoil all thepotential ways the SLV might not meet “investor expectations”, I thoughtit would be fun to make a contest of it (see comments).

The SLV pimmps out the price action of the silver it holds toshareholders. It can terminate the trust for a long list of reasons,not the least insignificant of which is if the Authorized Participants(who actually own the silver) feel like it.

Suddenly everybody has an opinion of what the price of silver should be, but as JPM is now finding out, if you don’t have silver to sell your opinion doesn’t count.

I don’t wish any ill on SLV shareholders, but make no mistake, youdon’t own silver. History has not been kind to people who made similarmistakes, and recent history should tell you no one is looking out foryou.

Miscellaneous Fun Facts:

  • In February, 2007 the author contacted the SEC via email regarding Countrywide Financial CEO Angelo Mozilo’s insider trading.
  • In March 2007 the author applied for an SEC bounty regarding Angelo Mozilo’s insider trading (up to 10% of recovered amount) . Countrywide’s stock was trading at about $37 at the time. It would trade over $40 in May and implode to less than $5 by late 2007.
  • On June 4, 2009 (27 months later) the SEC charged Mozilo with insider trading and securities fraud.
  • In October 2010 Mozilo agreed to pay $67.5 million in fines to the SEC to settle the charges against him.A
  • At its peak, Countrywide had a Market Cap of more than $26B. Angelo Mozilo has an estimated net worth of $600 million.
  • The SLV currently has a Market Cap of approximately $17B.
  • The author never received a bounty from the SEC, because the Dodd-Frank “Financial Reform” legislation repealed the previous SEC bounty program. Bounties can no longer be paid based on an outsider’s analysis of publicly available information.
  • In 2010, the author applied for a job as an “abusive trading practices specialist” with the SEC. He received no reply.
  • In February 2011, the US dropped its criminal investigation against Mozilo.
  • Paybacks are a bittch.

Common sense (and a little math) tells methat the SLV is already a fraud. When that becomes obvious to all isanyone’s guess, but based on my past experience, neither the SEC nor theCFTC will recognize it until about two years after it implodes.

Update:Thanks a million to Steve Quayle!!!He is the only major blogger who has linked to this story thusfar (kindof makes you wonder how much some of these other guys value truth).This story needs to be discussed. If you’ve got a blog, take this storyand run with it!

****Max Keiser has now added the story too, Thanks Max!


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