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Perpetua Resources Corp T.PPTA

Alternate Symbol(s):  PPTA

Perpetua Resources Corp. is a development-stage company. The Company operates through mineral exploration in the United States segment. It is primarily engaged in acquiring mining properties with the intention of exploring, evaluating, and placing them into production if warranted. The Company’s principal business is the exploration and, if warranted and subject to receipt of required permitting, redevelopment, restoration and operation of the Stibnite Gold Project in Idaho, the United States. Its Stibnite Gold Project is located in central Idaho, the United States, which lies over 100 miles northeast of Boise, Idaho, over 38 miles east of McCall, Idaho, and approximately 10 miles east of Yellow Pine, Idaho. Its mineral Stibnite Gold Project contains gold, silver, and antimony mineral deposits. It focuses to explore, evaluate, and potentially redevelop three of the deposits known as the Hangar Flats Deposit, West End Deposit and Yellow Pine Deposit.


TSX:PPTA - Post by User

Bullboard Posts
Post by moreDDon Dec 19, 2013 5:28am
279 Views
Post# 22021329

Let s get phyzical

Let s get phyzical
Tocqueville Asset Management L.P.
Let’s Get Physical
Money printing by world central banks, it would seem, has propelled the prices of all things rare. The list
includes fine art, vintage wines and antique sports cars. It is front page news that the flood of paper money has
enhanced the quotation of almost any tangible asset perceived to be in scarce supply. In a 11/23/13 article, The
Economist reports: “Evermore wealth is being parked in fancy storage facilities....The goods they stash in
freeports range from paintings, fine wine and precious metals to tapestries and even classic cars.” The article
observes that a key factor fuelling “this buying binge...is growing distrust of financial assets.” It doesn’t hurt that
the prices of most of these items have trended steadily higher in price over the past decade.
Most intriguing in this array of ascendant alternative assets, however, is the crypto currency known as
Bitcoin, whose advocates offer a rationale that is striking in its parallel to that for holding gold bullion. Bitcoin, as
almost everyone knows, is a liquid transactional medium of strictly limited supply. The parallel breaks down, of
course, when it comes to price behavior of these two otherwise similar alternative currencies. The price of a
Bitcoin has increased to $975/coin (Mt. Gox 12/10/13) from less than $25 in May 2011. At the end of May 2011,
bullion traded near $1500/oz, and is quoted today at a price that is 17% lower.
The supply of gold has increased over the past two years by 180 million ounces. As an increment to the
existing stock of above ground gold, the percentage works out to about 1.5%/year. In the meantime, the US
monetary base increased 14%, or an annual rate of 6.7%.
The supply of bitcoins is fixed at 21 million. There are 11.5 million in circulation. Mining new Bitcoins
requires incrementally more massive upgrades in computing power. According to Raoul Pal’s Global Macro
Newsletter of 1/11/13 as seen on Zero Hedge, Bitcoin’s success is due to the fact that “the man in the street
understands that central banks and governments are going to take their money via confiscation or default or
devaluation and it (Bitcoin) is their way of voting against it and them.”
The man in the street has apparently overlooked the similarities between gold and Bitcoin. The future
supply of newly mined gold would seem to be in jeopardy if current pricing holds. The same cannot be said for
US dollars. While mine output may continue for a year or two at the current pace, production post 2015 seems set
to decline and perhaps sharply. Discovery of new gold bearing ore bodies is down sharply. Miners are challenged
by declining grades, poor investment returns, worsening access to capital, and increasing risks due to political
instability in gold producing countries, rising tax burdens and growing permitting challenges. At current prices,
most gold mining companies are barely breaking even on an “all-in” cost accounting basis.
The Bitcoin-gold incongruity is explained by the fact that financial engineers have not yet discovered a
way to collateralize bitcoins for leveraged trades. There is (as yet) no Bitcoin futures exchange, no Bitcoin
derivatives, no Bitcoin hypothecation or rehypothecation. In 2000, gold expert Jeff Christian of the CPM Group
wrote:
Imagine, if you will, that the (bullion) bank can line up three or more producers and others who want to
borrow this gold. All of a sudden, that one ounce of gold is now involved in half a dozen transactions. The
physical volume has not changed, but the turnover has multiplied. This is the basic building block of
bullion banking.” (Bullion Banking Explained – February 2000). He went on to say that “many banks use
factor loadings of 5 to 10 for their bullion, meaning that they will loan or sell 5 to 10 times as much metal
as they have either purchased or committed to buy. One dealer we know uses a leverage factor of 40.
The buying and selling of paper gold is the traditional business of bullion banking. It is the core of how
business is conducted in the world of gold. Gold miners mine and concentrate gold ore. They send concentrates
from the mine site to refiners who purify the ore into bars that are 99.99% gold. Refiners remit cash to the mining
companies crediting them for gold content in the ore minus impurities. Refiners sell their gold bars, typically to
bullion banks in London, where the physical gold is received for deposit in allocated or unallocated pools and
held for distribution to users such as the jewelry trade, industry or mints. The physical gold that remains in
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London as unallocated bars is the foundation for leveraged paper gold trades. This chain of events is perfectly
ordinary and in keeping with time honored custom.
What is interesting, and perhaps not surprising, is the way in which a solid business model has been
perverted by extraordinary leverage into an important, unregulated trading profit center for large banks and hedge
funds wholly unrelated to the needs of miners, jewelry manufacturers, and other industrial users. In its 2013 study
related to gold, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) commented: “In the Financial Markets, the traded amount of
“paper linked to gold” exceeds by far the actual supply of physical gold: the volume on the London Bullion
Market Association (LBMA of which the RBI is a member) OTC market and the other major Futures and Options
Exchanges was over 92 times that of the underlying Physical Market.”
Source: RBI.org.in
,
The CPM Gold Yearbook 2011.
The LBMA reported that average daily volume of gold cleared in June 2013 was 29 million ounces, a new
record. The LBMA estimated in 2011 that trading was 10x clearing volume. Assuming this ratio has held over the
past two years, trading volume is the equivalent of 9000 metric tons of gold on a
daily
basis, compared to
annual
mine production of 2800 metric tons.
Compliant and unwitting central banks leave much of their gold on deposit in London, to be “managed”
by the Bank of England, presumably to produce earnings on an otherwise dormant asset. For example, the central
banks of Finland and Sweden announced last month that approximately half of their gold was somewhere in
London earning something. Reassuring language from the Bank of Finland suggested that “the risks associated
with gold investments are controlled using limits, investment diversification and limitations regarding run times.”
It would not be surprising if “run times” on leasing arrangements of central bank gold span decades.
1970’s documents recently declassified or otherwise unearthed contain extensive discussions among high level
policy makers including Volcker, Kissinger, Arthur Burns and others expressing various concerns over the
implications of a rising gold price. The policy objective in those days was to establish the SDR and the US dollar
as the foundation of a “durable, stable (international financial) system”, an objective which was deemed
“incompatible with a continued important role for gold as a reserve asset.” It was therefore resolved to “encourage
and facilitate the eventual demonetization of gold ...and (to) encourage the gradual disposition of monetary gold
through sales in the private market.” (from a 1974 memo written by Sidney Weintraub, Deputy Assistant
Secretary of State for International Finance and Development to Paul Volcker, Under Secretary of the Treasury for
Monetary Affairs).
At the November, 2013 Metals and Mining Conference in San Francisco, keynote speaker Ron Paul and
former lawyer to Governor Ronald Reagan, Art Costamagna, reminisced about their service together for the 1981-
1982 Reagan Gold Commission. They noted that the Commission was not allowed to initiate an audit of the Fort
Knox gold depository. Paul stated from the podium that no member of Congress has any real information on the
status of that gold. He believed that the gold was still physically located at Fort Knox but most likely encumbered
by complex derivative transactions.
Several observers have noted the difficulty Germany has encountered in requesting the repatriation of its
gold held on deposit at the New York Fed. A return of physical gold that could be easily accomplished in two
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trans-Atlantic cargo flights must be stretched out over seven years, Germany was informed by the custodian of
their gold, the New York Fed. However, the Germans were cordially invited to view their gold bars in the
meantime. The reasons for the stretched out delivery schedule are not given by government officials, but we
surmise that the difficulty relates to the unwinding of a web of leasing arrangements in which specific bars have
been re-hypothecated, perhaps hundreds of times, over many decades. Who knows what counter parties were
involved, not to mention their obligations or responsibilities?
One wonders whether the German request was the beginning of a run on the institutional arrangements
that govern global depositories of unallocated physical gold. For those of us who have cheered the withdrawl of
physical collateral from the system because of its potential tightening effect on derivative transactions, the short
term effect may have been to depress the price of paper gold because there is less physical to support the frenetic
trading of paper reported in the financial media. The shrinkage of collateral availability may be analogous to a
contraction of credit which in a general sense drives down asset prices. At the end of credit liquidation cycles,
however, collateral seems to wind up in the strongest hands. While most of the trading in paper gold nominally
takes place on Comex, there is a parallel and much larger over the counter and derivatives market based in
London where physical trades are also settled. The LBMA vets refiners, dealers, bar purity and other technical
matters. It is a trade organization consisting of 143 members ranging from bullion banks, central banks,
fabricators, refiners, and brokers who have some participation in the settlement of physical and paper trades.
LBMA reports the results of the two daily London Gold Fixes but otherwise has no substantive input, supervisory
or regulatory. According to a 11/26/13 Bloomberg dispatch, the fix is controlled by London Gold Market Fixing
Ltd, an entity owned by five bullion banks. While the process is unregulated, one of the member banks went on
the record for Bloomberg stating that the company has a “deeply rooted compliance culture and a drive to
continually look toward ways to improve our existing processes and practices.”
From a regulatory point of view, the City of London is an entity unto itself, with a peculiar and special
status, incorporated separately from greater London. It is the birthplace of the offshore banking industry and, as
described by Nicholas Shaxson, author of Treasure Islands, the city “provides endless loopholes for U.S. financial
corporations and many U.S. banking catastrophes can be traced substantially to those companies’ London
Offices.” A July, 2010 Working Paper titled “The (sizable) Role of Rehypothecation in the Shadow Banking
System” asserts that in the UK, an “unlimited amount of the customer’s assets can be rehypothecated and there
are no customer protection rules.” (Rehypothecation occurs when the collateral posted by a prime brokerage client
(e.g., hedge fund) to its prime broker is used as collateral also by the prime broker for its own purposes.) The
London offices of AIG, JP Morgan, MF Global and others took advantage of the local “regulation lite” to fund off
balance sheet ventures that would ultimately impair corporate and customer credit. It would be hard to imagine
that the culture of the City did not extend to gold. In fact, the intersection of the shadow banking system and the
pool of unallocated bullion does much to explain the proliferation of paper gold supply.
For the moment, the primary function of the paper gold market appears to be to enable macro hedge fund
traders to express bets on the likelihood and timing of tapering the pace of quantitative easing. Made possible by
lax oversight, weak accounting systems and otherwise dubious connections to underlying physical, the paper gold
market offers substantial capacity for money flows wishing to take a stance on the expected shift in Fed policy.
Unlike the physical gold market, which is not amenable to absorbing large capital flows, the paper market through
nearly infinite rehypothecation is ideal for hyperactive trading activity, especially in conjunction with related bets
on FX, equity indices, and interest rates.
Are the hedge funds, HFT’s and algos currently having a field day with this worn out trade paying any
attention to the steady drain of physical gold on which their speculations are based? As is usually the case in a
temporarily successful momentum trade where almost the entire universe is aboard, the answer is probably not.
The precipitous 2013 drop in Comex warehouse stocks and ETP holdings has been widely reported. It is also well
known that physical gold is showing up in record amounts in China. The manager of one of the largest Swiss
refiners stated (12/10/13-In Gold We Trust website) that after almost doubling capacity this year, “they put on
three shifts, they’re working 24 hours a day,....and every time (we) think it’s going to slow down, (we) get more
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orders.....70% of their kilo bar fabrication is going to China.” In his 37 years in the business, he has never
experienced this degree of difficulty in sourcing physical metal. In some cases, they are recasting good delivery
bars from the 1960’s. He added that there is no evidence of any return of these massive import flows back into
Western hands.
China appears to be bent on becoming a dominant force in the physical gold market. There are eight
refineries in mainland China converting 400 oz. London good delivery bars into Kilo bars, the preferred format in
Asia. An increasing flow of physical is bypassing London and going straight to China. China has not shown its
hand in the official sector. At last report (five years ago), China holds only 1000 tonnes of gold in official
reserves. Current market weakness certainly benefits large buyers of physical as well as their fiscal agents in
Western financial markets. China may be attempting to help their cause by understating import levels and by
overstating domestic production. The CEO of a major Canadian mining company, whose research group has done
due diligence on every existing producing mine of significance in the world, including China (over 2000
properties globally) believes that domestic Chinese production is less than half of what is reported officially. We
have also heard credible stories from other mining executives to the effect that short reserve lives will mean a
significant decline in future domestic production. Also uncaptured in Hong Kong import numbers are direct
shipments from Russian production, which are said to be conveyed by the Chinese military. The Chinese
government continues to encourage its citizens to buy physical gold, but why? Our guess is that Chinese policy
makerss take a different view of the future price than Western hedge funds, and we suspect they have a superior
grasp of where the gold price is headed t.
Rising demand for physical is not simply an Asian phenomenon. The December 3, 2013 U.S. Commodity
Futures Trading Commission report shows that commercials, the category which includes bullion banks, have
substantially reduced their massive short exposure over the past year while the short exposure of large traders,
mainly hedge funds have approached record highs for 2013. The CFTC bank participation report which includes
20 banks shows a swing from a net short position in December 2012 of 106,400 contracts to a net long position of
57,400 contracts for December 2013. Long contracts held by bullion banks are being used to claim physical gold
stored at Comex warehouses. JP Morgan accounted for more than 90% of December deliveries. The category of
registered bars which must be delivered upon notice stands at a two year low and is not far from a ten year low.
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It seems to us that the physical flows we have outlined cannot be supported by new mine supply or scrap
only. In our view, these flows could only be accommodated by a significant amount of destocking, the prime
source of which would appear to be vaults of unallocated gold in London. While it appears that Western traders
don’t seem to mind if their paper claims have a credible backing by physical, we can think of three reasons why
this may change and lead to an epic short squeeze: regulatory scrutiny, suspect bookkeeping, and the realization
that cash (in the bank) may no longer be king.
1.
The limits to leverage are unknown as are the potential flashpoints to collapse the pyramid. The
disappearance of collateral may have depressed gold prices in the short term, assuming there is any
integrity to the requirements for collateral backing. It is only our speculation, but we believe that increased
regulatory scrutiny could provide a major splash of cold water. Such scrutiny could lead, among others
things, tighter standards for collateral, rules on rehypothecation, etc. This could well lead to a scramble for
physical.
On 11/19/13, the UK Financial Conduct Authority announced that it is reviewing gold benchmarks as
part of their wider probe on how global rates are set. Why should the gold market be excluded from review
when many of the bullion banks have already been found guilty and paid fines for the manipulation of
Libor, energy, biofuels, and aluminum prices or benchmarks? On November 27
th
, the German financial
watchdog, BaFin, announced it was looking into allegations of possible manipulation by banks in gold and
silver price-fixing. A WSJ 11/29/13 article began with the innocuous headline: “UBS to Restructure
Foreign-Exchange Unit.” The bank is rolling its foreign-exchange and precious metals business into
another unit, with the co-head of the unit stepping down to explore “other opportunities in the bank.” In
addition to other actions, the bank has also “clamped down on the use of electronic chat rooms by its staff.
Chat rooms face scrutiny from regulators as venues for potential collusion and market manipulation.”
On December 5
th
, Deutsche Bank announced that it would cease trading energy, agriculture, base
metals, coal, and iron ore, while
retaining precious metals and a limited number of financial
derivatives traders.
It cited mounting regulatory pressure.” It is more than curious that a similar
announcement from JP Morgan in July of 2013 noted that the bank’s exit from commodities trading did not
include an exit from precious metals. The exclusion of gold from the newly enacted Volcker rule is the
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reason these banks are able to retain their precious metals proprietary trading activities. It appears that in
the eyes of Washington policy makers, all commodities are not created equal.
In the US, regulators including the US Federal Energy Regulatory Commission are “aggressively
targeting uneconomic trading in a crackdown on potential market manipulation” according to Shaun
Ledgerwood, senior consultant at the Brattle Group. From his June 2013 white paper, Uneconomic trading,
market manipulation and baseball: “A key common feature ...is that trades used to trigger the alleged
schemes were designed to lose money on a stand-alone basis, while benefiting related physical or financial
positions.”
The CFTC is examining position limits on spot trades for gold and other precious metals. CFTC
Commissioner Gensler’s deadline for a resolution of the issue is Q1 2014. Among the issues to be settled is
how to account for entry of orders by affiliated entities, an area of suspected potential abuse. In question
also is whether new Comex position limits, should they be imposed, apply to trades settled in London. The
CFTC board is in transition due to the departure of Gensler and two other vacancies on the five member
body. Therefore, it remains to be seen when the Commission will act on this issue. Nevertheless, we think
that the discussion surrounding the surfacing of this issue is constructive and that the potential enactment
of more restrictive rules on limits could be positive development in the direction of more orderly trading. It
should come as no surprise that bullion banks are lobbying hard against position limits.
Where scrutiny and possible new regulation leads and what it means for the gold market is only a
speculation at this stage. However, we speculate that it will result in a big win for those of us who remain
bullish on the future price. In the words of former Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas, “sunlight is
the best disinfectant.”
2.
The intermediation arrangements between the physical and paper gold markets may come under
scrutiny for reasons other than regulatory oversight. The LBMA, Comex, and even gold backed ETFs
depend on market trust in the ability of owners of paper claims to exchange those claims for physical gold.
For unallocated bars vaulted in London, the complexity of cross ownership claims and entitlements to the
underlying physical must be bewildering in light of the amount of re-hypothecation necessary to support
the kind of frantic trading activity reported by the LBMA. It would not seem out of order to ask whether
there are parties asleep at the switch on both sides of the trade – the central banks who lease gold into the
pool, and the bullion bank back offices in charge of record keeping. Cutting corners in procedures to
protect the chain of ownership of physical to speed transactions to support a pyramid of leverage is not an
unreasonable nightmare to awaken central bank custodians whose principal charge is asset protection.
Does anyone in bullion banking recall robo mortgage signing?
The pool of unallocated gold bullion in London is the center of the bullion banking system. The gold is
vaulted at multiple locations in the hands of separate institutions. Disclosure is minimal and to our
knowledge there has never been a comprehensive audit of the bullion and, more important, the systems on
which the clearing process is dependent. We have heard instances of where private requests for delivery of
allocated gold have been refused. While it is a simple matter for an owner of allocated gold bars to view
the metal and check bar numbers against a statement of ownership, it is an entirely different matter to
prove solitary unencumbered ownership. It is a matter of trust.
We believe that the very real possibility of an indecipherable web of multiple claims on the same bar
of gold should concern both central bank owners, grass roots constituents of politicians in Europe and
elsewhere pushing for repatriation, and private investors who hold paper claims against the metal. The
potential for slipshod book keeping (does robo signing come to mind?) is a legitimate issue that could lead
to a significant decrease in the amount of central bank gold available for lease.
3.
The risk of holding a significant portion of personal wealth within the framework of conventional
banking and securities arrangements is on the increase. Simon Mikhailovich of Eidesis Capital LLC states
in the November 15 issue of Grant’s: “In the old framework, cash was a risk-free asset. In the new
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paradigm of systemic risks, no asset (even cash) is risk-free so long as it is in custody of a financial
institution. Investors and depositors no longer have clear title to their own assets if they are held in
financial accounts. There is now a body of law (including Dodd-Frank) that allows custodial assets to be
swept into the bankruptcy estate and be subordinated to senior claims.” Hand in hand with the evolution of
the banking laws is the subtle but pernicious evolution of the practice of banking: “Various rules and
practices have made it almost impossible to use cash and securities. Go try to make large cash withdrawal
or cash deposit and see what paperwork you would be forced to complete.”
Should we worry about cash in the bank? Never mind that policy makers and respected private
economists are openly campaigning to debase paper currency. “In Fed and Out, Many Now Think Inflation
Helps” was the headline for a New York Times article on 10/26/13. “(Fed) critics, including Professor
Rogoff, say the Fed is being much too meek. He says that inflation should be pushed as high as 6% a year
for a few years.” In addition, there are calls for outright taxes on wealth and movement towards a cashless
society in which all money would be electronic. In his recent speech before the IMF, Lawrence Summers
stated that electronic money would “make it impossible to hoard money outside the bank, allowing the Fed
to cut interest rates to below zero, spurring people to spend more.” Cash and securities within banking and
securities institutions are visible forms of wealth. Liquid private wealth captured in electronic form offers
endless possibilities for wealth redistribution and other social engineering schemes. Tangible assets that are
not securitized or digitized are less visible and therefore less vulnerable to broad edicts targeting private
wealth.
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The same Mr. Mikhailovich notes that during the financial crisis of 2008, public policy was mostly an
ad hoc reaction to a cascade of emergencies. Since then, policy makers have had plenty of time to plan
orchestrated responses to circumstances similar or worse. In a series of steps, many small and some large,
almost always cloaked in complexity and obscurity, and always in the name of public interest or national
security, policy makers have constructed mechanisms that are substantially and substantively unfriendly to
private wealth:
Source: TBR
Western investors seem to view gold only as a directional bet based on considerations ranging from micro
economic (supply and demand) to macroeconomic (money debasement, fiscal disorder etc.) In our opinion, this
view only partially explains what drives long term gold demand. We have always thought that the larger and more
encompassing driver was wealth preservation. Gold is insurance against unforeseen events. It is the one tangible
asset that is both truly liquid and that can most reliably provide buying power during times of crisis. In this
context, the idea of selling it for a “profit” seems absurd. Physical gold is a reserve of liquidity, and it seems
inappropriate to think of it as a way to buy a container of milk or a gallon of gas under emergency conditions. For
notional apocalyptic purposes, a carton of Marlboros or case of Glenfiddich is better suited than ingots or coins to
pacify the hordes of barbarians at one’s doorstep. However, for preservation of large scale wealth over generations
there is no substitute. Gold does what expensive homes, crates of Picassos, safe deposit boxes packed with
Rolexes, or a garage full of Aston Martin DB 7’s cannot.....morph quickly and easily into liquid buying power,
with no haircut, when it matters the most.
Paper claims on gold will always serve well for trading/ gambling purposes. For those who wish to make
directional bets on the future gold price, bullish or otherwise, futures contracts, ETP’s, or other paper derivatives,
there is no need to hold physical gold. In fact, one could categorically state that physical gold is not for traders.
However, time and again throughout history, usually over a weekend, paper claims have been rendered non-
functional, useless or worthless. Banks may shut down, securities exchanges may stop trading, wire transfers may
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be blocked, arrangements may be suspended, or laws may change. The rhyming of history is not limited to far
away places such as Cyprus, Poland, or Ireland. Recall the words of President Nixon (Sunday, August 15, 1971):
In recent weeks, the speculators have been waging an all-out war on the American dollar....I have
directed Secretary Connally to suspend
temporarily
the convertibility of the dollar into gold....Let me lay
to rest the bugaboo of what is called devaluation.
An article in The Wall Street Journal Op Ed piece on 11/29/13, Romain Hatchuel wrote: “From New York
to London, Paris and beyond, powerful economic players are deciding that with an ever-deteriorating global fiscal
outlook, conventional levels and methods of taxation will no longer suffice. That makes weapons of mass wealth
destruction—such as the IMF’s one-off capital levy, Cyprus’s bank deposit confiscation, or outright sovereign
defaults—likelier by the day.” The two year long decline in the gold price has been largely explained in terms of
the likelihood of Fed tapering and by inference the return to normal economic conditions for the global economy.
Nothing could be further off the mark, in our opinion. It seems to us that the decline, initially a reaction to an
overbought spike hyped by headlines of a government shutdown in August of 2011, gained momentum as macro
traders saw selling and shorting gold as a vehicle to express views on tapering, Fed policy, jobs reports, and the
health of the US economy. It makes perfect sense that confidence in the restoration of normalcy in monetary
policy would be bad for gold. It appears to us that the pressure on gold is part of a vast macro trade involving the
dollar, interest rates and stocks, with a script that seems to rely in part on encouragement from the official sector
and in part on pure fantasy. As the short game gathered momentum, vested interests in lower gold prices have
become powerful and entrenched.
The money printing thesis has been supportive of almost every tangible asset deemed to be of limited
supply except for gold, a glaring exception. The explanation for the incongruity, in our opinion, is warp speed
rehypothecation via the shadow banking system of the murky pool of London’s unallocated gold i to create
artificial supply of this scarce asset. The murky pool which is the foundation for this trade is draining, perhaps
quickly, while the party goes on for the gold bears. The set up for a short squeeze of this overcrowded trade and
market reversal seems compelling. Catalysts are awaited and as yet unknown, but in our opinion, it will not take
much of a spark to inflict serious damage. A reversal will lift not only the gold price but that of the beleaguered
gold mining sector where substantive and positive change has been occurring unnoticed by most investors.
In the financial markets, a person that is one step ahead of the crowd is considered a genius, but two steps
ahead, a crackpot. Call us the latter, or just resolute, but we hereby go on record as downgrading the sovereign
debt of all democracies to junk status. It seems to us that restoration of sustainable fiscal order remains a long shot
and that money printing, thought by most to be only an emergency measure, will become the norm. Our negative
view on the prospects for fiat currency has not been invalidated by the steep two year decline in gold price. When
the market reverses, the diminished physical anchor to paper claims, concerns over title and encumbrances on
central bank bullion, and worries over the drift of public policy will drive liquid capital into gold. However, this
time around, it seems to us that the major recipient of flows will be the physical metal itself. Holders of paper
claims to gold will receive polite and apologetic letters from intermediaries offering to settle in cash at prices well
below the physical market. To those who wish to hold their wealth exclusively in paper assets, implicitly trusting
the policy elites to resurrect normally functioning capital markets and economic conditions, we say good luck. For
those who harbor doubts on such an outcome, we say get physical.
Best regards,
John Hathaway
Portfolio Manager and Senior Managing Director
© Tocqueville Asset Management L.P.
December 12, 2013
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