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Drawing on GATA board member Adrian Douglas' statistical study from
August 2010 ("The Gold Market Isn't 'Fixed,' It's Rigged," http://www.gata.org/node/8918), Sam and Bob Kirtley of
SK Options Trading in Wellington, New Zealand, yesterday mused at length once
again about the likely success of a gold trading fund that exploited the
peculiar behavior of the gold market -- rising when the sun sets on London
and New York and falling when traders in those cities go back to work.
"The more gold rises overnight in essentially Asian
markets," Douglas wrote a year and a half ago, "the more it is sold
down into the PM fix. This was exactly the modus operandum
of the London Gold Pool but now it is being done covertly."
The Kirtleys comment: "A hypothetical
gold investment fund starting with $100 million in 2001, and using it to buy
gold at the AM fix and sell it at the PM fix, would now be left with just $31
million, almost a 70 percent loss in just under 10 years. Over the same time
period gold prices have risen over 590 percent. From this we can infer that
in fact it was possible to make money shorting gold every day for the last
decade or so. If a hedge fund or even an individual trader were to have sold
gold at the AM fix and covered that short position at the PM fix, for each
day of this terrific bull-market run in gold, that
fund would have almost tripled its starting capital."
GATA's explanation for this is well known. If those who deny the
possibility of gold market manipulation have an explanation for it apart from
mere coincidence, we'd love to hear it.
The Kirtleys' commentary is headlined
"Revisiting Our Proposal for an Overnight Gold Fund" and it's
posted at their other Internet site, Silver-Prices.net, here:
http://www.silver-prices.net/home/revisiting-our-proposal-for-an-overnig...
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