Extreme Gold/Silver Shorting

 | Jun 28, 2015 12:44AM ET

Gold and silver are languishing near major lows, trudging through the barren sentiment wasteland of the summer doldrums. The major factor behind this weakness is extreme shorting by American futures speculators. But their heavily-bearish bets are actually very bullish for both precious metals. Not only do these traders as a herd always bet wrong at price extremes, their shorts are guaranteed near-future buying.

American futures speculators’ trading has utterly dominated gold and silver price action in recent years. This single group of traders doesn’t normally wield such outsized influence. But with Western investors largely missing in action since early 2013, futures speculators have gone unchallenged. Couple this with the extreme leverage inherent in futures trading, and its stranglehold on gold and silver prices is ironclad.

This vexing anomaly started when the Federal Reserve’s third quantitative-easing campaign spun up to full speed in early 2013. Unlike QE1 and QE2, QE3 was open-ended with no predetermined size or end date. The Fed deftly used this to its advantage, working overtime to convince traders that it would ramp up QE3 to arrest any material stock-market selloff. They came to believe the Fed was backstopping stock markets!

So traders were quick to buy every minor selloff, forcing the stock markets inexorably higher. Traders started to abandon everything else to chase these extraordinary Fed-levitated stock markets. They forgot about prudent portfolio diversification, and shunned alternative investments led by gold. So it suffered its biggest quarterly plunge in 93 years in Q2’13, as American stock traders jettisoned SPDR Gold Shares (ARCA:GLD) gold-ETF shares.

That once-in-a-century hellstorm was so brutal that the vast majority of Western investors have yet to return to gold. They remain radically underinvested in this essential portfolio diversifier, one of very few assets that moves contrary to stock markets. And without normal investment demand, American futures speculators have had free reign to effectively hold precious-metals prices hostage to their bearish psychology.

This epic Fed-spawned anomaly has created a quandary for contrarian commentators like me. The small fraction of investors and speculators still interested in gold and silver these days want to hear about fundamentals like Chinese and Indian demand, traditional drivers. But in today’s unprecedented environment, all that matters for price action beyond ETF capital flows is American futures speculators’ trading.

When they buy gold and silver futures, the precious metals’ prices rise. When they sell, gold and silver fall. The correlation between recent years’ price action and American futures speculators’ holdings is incredibly high. While I can’t wait for this anomalous dominance to fade again as investment demand finally normalizes, today it remains the overwhelmingly-controlling driver of gold and silver price action.

Get The News You Want
Read market moving news with a personalized feed of stocks you care about.
Get The App

This is crystal-clear when charted. American speculators’ total positions in long and short gold-futures contracts are published once a week by the US government’s Commodity Futures Trading Commission in its famous Commitments of Traders reports. And when gold and silver prices are superimposed on this futures-holdings data, the results are striking. All contrarians have to understand this stranglehold on prices.