On Monday,
December 15, backwardation on gold was still in force at an annualized
discount rate that narrowed to 1.55% in the December contract, but widened to
0.36% in the February contract. 12,673 contracts remain for tender in
December, including an additional 37 contracts since last Friday. The discount
on the December futures was 50¢ offered to those owners of physical gold
who would transfer the carry to the market for the remaining 14 in December,
or 60¢ for the 72 days deferred delivery for the February contract.
By Wednesday,
December 17, backwardation on gold disappeared both in the December and
February contracts, on an upwards spike in the price of gold worth $50. At
this point in time it appears unlikely that the December contract will
default, although the threat to registered gold in Comex
warehouses remains very disturbing.
* * *
The father of backward thinking on backwardation is undoubtedly John
Maynard Keynes. In his 2-volume Treatise
on Money published in 1930 he developed a theory of the futures markets
and introduced the concept of normal
backwardation. As the name suggests, backwardation is considered as the
normal condition of the futures market so that, by implication, contango is ‘abnormal’. According to Keynes
backwardation, or discount on the futures price as compared to the spot
price, is a necessary incentive that is supposed to persuade speculators to
buy forward. In his view the discount is just the ‘insurance
premium’, as it were, that speculators collect for shouldering the risk
that the price of the commodity may fall during the time-span to delivery.
It would be hard to misconstrue the meaning of backwardation in a way
worse than Keynes’ “normal backwardation” does. His theory
turns reality upside down. The truth is that the normal condition of the
futures markets is that of contango whereby the
futures price is at a premium compared to the spot price. The premium accrues
to the warehouseman who carries the physical commodity while hedging it by
selling an equal amount of futures.
The basis, or difference between the futures price and the spot price,
is the signal telling the warehouseman about the state of demand for
warehouse space. One may even say that the (positive) basis is the market
price of available space in the warehouses. It tends to be low when
warehouses have a lot of vacant space to fill, and high when they are close
to full. Not only does it help to allocate scarce warehouse space between
competing uses; the basis also guides the warehouseman telling him how fast
he should fill his vacant warehouse space, or how fast he should make space
available for alternative and more urgent uses; in other words, to decide
which commodity to buy and which to sell. Other things being the same the warehouseman
should buy the commodity with the higher and sell the one with the lower
basis. Without the signal from the basis and the variable contango
he would be in the dark shooting from the hip.
At any rate, backwardation is always indicating an abnormal condition:
that of a shortage, whether it is due to insufficient production or prodigal
consumption, or whether it indicates lack of foresight to carry sufficient
supplies to cover future needs.
Keynes’ celebrated faux
pas in introducing the misnomer ‘normal backwardation’ is
second only to that of Karl Marx. As is known, Marx has made the worst
blunder in the history of economic thought when he created his theory of
value. According to him, labor is the exclusive source of value, so the value
of merchandise is directly proportional to labor content. Thus, then, the
government can create value by having bottle-caps buried in deep holes and
let people prospect for them and dig them up at great cost in labor –
as has in fact been suggested by Keynes. This shows the common thread in the
thinking of these two ‘defunct’ economists.
The Keynesian mindset is obsessed with the idea of overproduction and
with the need to fight it by all available means. At the same time it
dismisses the idea that in the real world scarcity is the basic human problem
one should worry about.
* * *
Keynesian economists never quote their mentor’s theory of the
futures market as it is a major embarrassment. Still, it is hard not to agree
with James Turk (see References) that much of what has been written on the
Internet about backwardation “is total rubbish”.
The high level of ignorance about the basis and backwardation was the
chief cause of the fiasco -- and Turk is silent on this -- of the gold mining
industry falling into the trap laid by the government. It was the trap of
‘hedging’, more precisely, the selling of mine output forward up
to fifteen years in advance. It was an insane collective hara-kiri of a major
industry. It failed miserably because it left the reaction of speculators out
of the equation. Yet it was perfectly predictable that the reaction would be
negative -- from the point of view of the industry itself. Speculators would
abandon their traditional perch on the long side of the market, and they
would hop over to the short side. Gold mines and speculators would fall over
themselves in competing for the privilege of being the first in selling gold
short.
The net result was that the gold price was clubbed down every time it
was trying to climb out of the hole. Gold prospecting was stifled. In
addition, the grip on the world of the regime of irredeemable currency was
reinforced -- just as wished by the governments. Other results included the
premature depletion of the ore reserves of the mines, the looting of shareholders
by management, the insanity and waste involved in producing gold at peak
rates of output only to squander it at $250 an ounce, as recently as six
years ago!
Had gold mining executives educated themselves about the gold basis
and the threat of backwardation in gold, the disaster would have been
avoided. Based on the correct principles of bilateral hedging, the mines
would have developed a marketing strategy motivated by the trading of the
gold basis -- instead of trading the gold price. The vanishing of the gold
basis would have prevented these executives from making the worst blunder:
selling (borrowed) gold and buying the futures. They would have saved a
bundle for their shareholders to whom the losses caused by the vanishing
basis were charged. They could have maximized the useful life-span of their
mines, instead of maximizing short-term paper profits of dubious value. Gold
mining executives, just like the American bankers, are very good at paying
themselves huge salaries and bonuses. They are not nearly as good at
admitting their mistakes and learning from them.
* * *
According to Turk there have been three episodes of backwardation in
gold as follows:
(1) The first
occurrence was November 29, 1995. That backwardation lasted for a day and was
probably the result of a hedge buy-back by Barrick Gold.
(2) The next occurrence lasted for two days, September
29-30, 1999. It was caused by a mad rush for physical gold to cover short
positions in the wake of the Washingtin Agreement on central bank gold sales.
(3) The third occurrence happened last
month, and continued for three business days, November 20, 21 and 24. Turk
says that no special event triggered this latest backwardation.
Turk does not consider the possibility that the November episode could
have been a premonition of a more durable backwardation on the way. He does
not recognize the backwardation at the Comex that
started on December 2 and lasted for two weeks, in spite of the fact that it
has been confirmed by the Tokyo Commodity Exchange where backwardation was in
force, not only between spot and nearby but between more distant futures as
well.
The key to understanding the present upheaval in the world economy and
the relevance of backwardation to it is that, regardless of official
propaganda, gold circulation (such as it is) never ceased to be an important
part of the world’s trading system. Backwardation means that gold
circulation is stopped in its tracks, which is deflationary in the extreme, greatly contributing to the
contraction of world trade.
Backwardation in gold causes, and is
caused by, the cascading contraction of world trade. It is
preposterous to suggest that no special event triggered the backwardation in
gold last November. The special event was the onset of Great Depression II,
just as sabotaging the gold standard by Britain on September 1, 1931,
heralded the onset of Great Depression I.
The problem with Turk’s analysis is that he considers
backwardation in gold in isolation, taken out of the context of the vanishing
of the gold basis that has been going on for at least three decades. This is
like trying to understand the eruption of a volcano while deliberately
ignoring prior rumblings. Given the secular decline of the gold basis, it
should be easy to interpret the backwardation episode last month as a warning
of the crisis caused by the realization that the world was walking into a
gold trap. The gold basis was bound to enter negative territory, because its
relentless decline indicated that ever more gold was going into hiding, while
it became ever more difficult to coax it out of hiding.
This is not a crisis of Comex. This is a
crisis of the international monetary and payments system trying, as it is, to
reduce global debt with irredeemable promises issued by central banks. This
is a crisis caused by mainstream economics in putting monetary science beyond
the pale, and cheering on the government for driving gold, the ultimate
extinguisher of debt, out of the monetary system.
Borrowing Carl Menger’s admirable
phrase ‘police science,’ alias
Keynesian economics, must bear full
responsibility for conceiving, giving birth to, and raising
to maturity Great Depression II.
References
Tainted Research: Lysenkoism
-- American Style, June 4, 2003
Monetary versus
Non-monetary Commodities,
April 25, 2006
The Last Contango in Washington,
June 30, 2006
Red Alert: Gold Backwardation!!! December 4, 2008
Has the Curtain Fallen on the Last Contango in Washington?
December 8, 2008
There Is No Fever Like Gold Fever, December 10, 2008
Backwardation That Shook the World, December 14,
2008
These and other
articles of the author can be accessed at the website
www.professorfekete.com
A Treatise on Money, volume I-II, by John M. Keynes,
1930
The Nonsense about Gold Backwardation, etc., by Mike
(Mish) Shedlock, December 7, 2008, www.globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
No Fever Like Gold Fever: Response, by Mike (Mish) Shedlock (ibid.)
More on Gold
Backwardation, by James Turk, December 12, 2008
Acknowledgement
The author wishes to express his thanks to Mr. Sandeep Jaitly of Soditic Ltd., London, England, (e-mail: Sandeep.Jaitly@soditic.co.uk)
for tracking the gold basis for him.
Calendar of events
Szombathely, Martineum Academy, Hungary, March 28-29, 2009
Encore Session of Gold Standard
University Live.
Topics: When Will the
Gold Standard Be Released from Quarantine?
The Vaporization of the Derivatives Tower
Labor and the Unfolding
Great Depression
Is
There Life after Backwardation?
San
Francisco School of Economics, June-August, 2009
Money
and Banking, a ten-week course based on the work of Professor
Fekete. The Syllabus of this course
is can be seen on the website:
www.professorfekete.com
Antal E. Fekete
Professor, Intermountain Institute of
Science and Applied Mathematics, Missoula, MT 59806, U.S.A.
Gold Standard
University
DISCLAIMER AND CONFLICTS
DISCLAIMER AND CONFLICTS
THE PUBLICATION OF THIS LETTER IS FOR YOUR INFORMATION AND AMUSEMENT ONLY.
THE AUTHOR IS NOT SOLICITING ANY ACTION BASED UPON IT, NOR IS HE SUGGESTING
THAT IT REPRESENTS, UNDER ANY CIRCUMSTANCES, A RECOMMENDATION TO BUY OR SELL
ANY SECURITY. THE CONTENT OF THIS LETTER IS DERIVED FROM INFORMATION AND
SOURCES BELIEVED TO BE RELIABLE, BUT THE AUTHOR MAKES NO REPRESENTATION THAT
IT IS COMPLETE OR ERROR-FREE, AND IT SHOULD NOT BE RELIED UPON AS SUCH. IT IS
TO BE TAKEN AS THE AUTHORS OPINION AS SHAPED BY HIS EXPERIENCE, RATHER THAN A
STATEMENT OF FACTS. THE AUTHOR MAY HAVE INVESTMENT POSITIONS, LONG OR SHORT,
IN ANY SECURITIES MENTIONED, WHICH MAY BE CHANGED AT ANY TIME FOR ANY REASON.
|