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The November 8 Wall Street
Journal carried an article about the Silver Users Association’s attempt
to block the new Silver Exchange Traded Fund proposed by Barclays. They report
the same argument that Ted Butler explained in previous articles. He said
there wasn’t enough silver available for the fund and any attempt to
procure it would drive up the price. In fact, it seems clear to me that Butler’s articles
actually initiated the current attention on this issue.
Here’s excerpts from the article:
"A group representing companies that use silver for industrial purposes
is seeking to block the launch of an exchange-traded fund tied to the
precious metal, leading some observers to question whether federal regulators
will allow the fund to go forward.
"The Silver Users
Association, a lobbying group interested in keeping an orderly silver market,
has asked the Securities and Exchange Commission to deny an ETF currently in
registration from investment manager Barclays Global Investors. Unlike
traditional mutual funds, exchange-traded funds trade all day on exchanges
like stocks.
"The organization
says a silver ETF would create a price squeeze in
the metal because the fund would have to buy a large amount of silver to back
the fund’s shares before the launch…
‘A
silver ETF would only exaggerate silver’s illiquidity given the
sheer volume of physical silver needed to be shipped and stored,’ the
group said in its letter to the SEC"…
"The SUA says part of
its mission is to keep silver prices low and keep the metal readily available
for users. The association’s members include jeweler
Tiffany & Co., photographic-equipment maker Eastman Kodak Co. and
chemical giants Dow Chemical Co. and DuPont Co."
I’ve asked Ted
Butler to explain what all this means to those who own silver or plan to buy
it. As always, these are his thoughts and not necessarily those of Investment
Rarities, Inc.
COMMON SENSE AND THE SUA
BY THEODORE BUTLER
When I first wrote about
the proposed silver ETF back in June, I had no idea that the Silver Users
Association (SUA) would confirm my take on the matter. My take, of course,
was that the silver ETF was going to be good for silver, regardless of
whether it actually came into being or not. If it came, great, as that would
provide big demand for scarce actual silver. If it didn’t come, that
would also be great, as that would prove to all that there was not enough
real silver available for sizable investment.
In the event that the SEC
rejected approval for the silver ETF, I had anticipated that rejection would
be accompanied by a "spin" designed to obscure the real reason,
namely, not enough real silver. I thought people would have to think to see
through the spin to get to the real reason for rejection. I had never
anticipated that my old nemesis, the SUA, would make everything so clear and
easy to understand. Thanks to the SUA, we have entered into the "No Spin
Zone."
Please remember, it has
yet to be decided if the silver ETF will be approved or rejected. But that
determination is suddenly of secondary concern. What is of primary concern is
the actual debate and publicity that this issue has garnered. Out of nowhere,
the main topic of discussion is the Silver Users Association and the silver
ETF. I have seen more written, in the past few weeks, on this issue than any
single silver issue, since Warren Buffett’s
purchase 8 years ago. It is on everyone’s mind in the silver world.
How the SUA came to be the
center of attention is remarkable and somewhat an
outer-body personal experience for me. I’d like to explain why. Long
before I started writing for Investment Rarities, and even before I started
writing on the Internet, I conducted a one-man campaign against the SUA,
starting about 20 years ago. I did everything I could think of to expose the
SUA for the corrupt organization I believe that they are. I mean everything.
I got the Bureau of Mines
to stop using SUA-sponsored silver consumption data in official US
statistics. I contacted the CEOs of the leading
members of the SUA at the time, including Eastman Kodak, DuPont and 3M, to
stop their collusive price influence on the silver market. I lobbied the
mining companies to stand up to the SUA. I contacted every media source I
could think of to expose the SUA’s illegal
influence on the silver market. Looking back on my past letters, I
didn’t just petition the Justice Department to put the SUA out of
business, I actually harangued them with numerous letters and phone calls. I
contacted more elected and regulatory officials than I can count.
I tried my very best to
show how if it were illegal for big producers to collude to raise prices, it
was illegal for big industrial consumers to collude to lower prices. But, in
spite of an effort that I don’t think I could duplicate, at this stage
in my life, I did not succeed in exposing the SUA to a widespread audience.
That’s what is so
remarkable about the recent turn of events. I couldn’t expose the SUA,
but they turned around and exposed themselves. If they hadn’t publicly
announced their opposition to the proposed silver ETF, very few in the silver
world would have even been aware of the SUA. They shot themselves in the
foot. Of course, I feel like I did help them hold the gun at least, as
I’m convinced that my article in June on the ETF was what prompted the
SUA to take the extraordinary public stance against the ETF, in the first
place.
What is so special about
this whole SUA/ETF story is that the cat is out of the bag in a number of
ways. First, the SUA has exposed itself to the world for what it really is
– an organization whose sole purpose for existence is to depress the
price of silver any way it can. If that’s not illegal, I don’t
know what is. Second, it should be expected that the members of the SUA would
follow their own advice and seek to secure real silver before the shortage
they expect actually hits. Third, the SUA has succeeded in uniting the silver
world against a common enemy – the SUA itself. I have yet to hear
anyone praise the SUA for its stance against the silver ETF.
But most important is the
message it is sending to you, the silver investor. This is your wake-up call
to complete your silver purchasing plans. The SUA has confirmed everything I
have ever written about in silver. They didn’t intend to do that, but
there was no other way. You can’t objectively analyze the silver market
and not come to the conclusion that the market must explode due to an
inevitable shortage.
All this fuss over one proposed silver ETF should make you think.
Several gold ETFs, no problem. One silver ETF, big
problem. There was no open and organized opposition to the gold ETFs, and their ultimate creation and active trading has
led to no shortage in gold. The open and organized opposition by the SUA to
the silver ETF confirms which commodity has the most critical supply/demand
situation. When someone goes out of their way to prevent others from buying
what they want to buy in your place, you can be sure they are not doing so for
your benefit.
Whether the silver
shortage becomes apparent due to the ETF, as the SUA seeks to prevent, or
whether the shortage becomes apparent later, is not important. What is
important is that the silver shortage will soon be upon us. And when the shortage
is obvious to all, say good-bye to the current give-away prices.
What remains to be seen is
whether the sudden attention on the SUA results in my long held dream and
goal, namely, the discrediting and demise of this corrupt organization. There
is no place in a legal and free market environment for collusion among the
largest industrial consumers to influence price. I am hopeful that this
ultra-rare spotlight on the SUA causes people to wake-up and recognize the
true nature of these manipulators. The real issue is not whether the silver
ETF gets approved, but rather if the SUA is allowed to continue to exist.
Theodore
Butler
www.investmentrarities.com
(No one can safely predict the future and it’s
possible that Israel
Friedman’s Butler’s
analysis will prove incorrect. Silver can go up, but silver can go down. It
is up to you to read, analyze, and arrive at your own conclusions. Prudence
requires we emphasize that precious metals may or may not prove to be
suitable for your consideration.)
 
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