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WEEKLY COMMENTARY
February 23, 2004
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OBSTRUCTION OF JUSTICE
By Theodore Butler
(The following essay was written by silver analyst Theodore Butler.
Investment Rarities does not necessarily endorse these views, which may
or may not prove to be correct.)
While I have mixed feelings on the current Martha Stewart trial
(should it have been brought in the first place?), the government's case
is centered on the principle that lying in an investigation obstructs
justice. That’s an important point in the legal process. It’s probable
that the government has selected such a high-profile celebrity to try to
send a strong signal to those who may be tempted to lie in future
investigations.
It is important that no one obstructs the path to truth and justice
in any investigation. But it should work both ways and apply to the
government, as well. In fact, the government should probably be held to
a higher standard. After all, most senior officials in the government
swear an oath of office to upholding the Constitution and truth and
justice.
I believe that the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) is
obstructing justice in its regulation of the COMEX silver market. I
don't know if the CFTC's obstruction is based upon malfeasance or
incompetence. But that doesn't really matter. They are guilty of
obstruction. This is a strong allegation, and it is one I do not make
lightly.
The CFTC is openly shirking its responsibility of preventing market
manipulation in the silver market. This is the primary reason why the
CFTC and US commodity law exist. Every other responsibility is
secondary. Therefore, it is incumbent upon the CFTC to be alert should
they receive credible allegations of a market manipulation. That is not
happening, and it is why I say that the CFTC is obstructing justice.
There is no doubt, in my mind, that the silver market is manipulated.
Every day, more and more people agree. Manipulation is the number one
crime in any market, and preventing it is the chief responsibility of
our regulatory structure. The silver manipulation is proved by the law
of supply and demand, which dictates that the price of a commodity must
rise if consumption is greater than production. The very existence of
silver "leasing" and the largest uneconomic naked short position in
history are visible manifestations of the manipulation, as is the
depressed and controlled price for two decades.
The CFTC (and the self-regulators at the NYMEX/COMEX) are obstructing
justice by avoiding an open and public "trial" of the silver
manipulation. Who knows, maybe they have good answers to the simple
questions I have asked them. Maybe they have good reasons for not
adopting the solutions I have offered. But, their refusal to even
discuss these substantive issues is not comforting. What would happen to
Martha Stewart, or any defendant, if no defense to government
accusations was offered? What would happen if subpoenas and trial dates
were ignored? Then why should a government, of, by and for the people be
allowed to simply ignore and evade what is clearly a public mandate?
What happens if the public presses the government to redress an obvious
wrong and the government refuses? What if great numbers of concerned
citizens demand the government to enforce existing law and the
government looks the other way? Where does the majority turn to seek an
open and impartial setting to judge whether their concerns are
legitimate or not?
There are close to 3000 names on the silver petition, in addition to
countless letters sent to the regulators, demanding a resolution of the
silver manipulation. I have not seen one comment, from anyone,
suggesting that the regulators should not address the issue. It's as if
the CFTC and the COMEX are intentionally trying to undermine public
confidence in the integrity of the silver market. Refusing to respond
quickly to legitimate questions about obvious problems, accompanied by
fair solutions, asked by thousands of regular investors will not foster
integrity.
I would like to put something into perspective here. I know hundreds
of you have taken the time and effort recently to write to the
regulators about this matter, and I know thousands of you have put your
name and comments on the petition. For that, I thank you. What you have
done, in my opinion, is to accelerate the timetable on what is a certain
and inevitable outcome - the termination of the silver manipulation. I
believe we are reaching critical mass.
When I initiated my campaign to end the silver manipulation in 1985,
it basically consisted of writing to the CFTC and COMEX (directly and
through elected officials) concerning the outsized dealer short
position. I'd mail a letter, get a non-responsive reply a month or two
later, write back advising why their answer was non-responsive, and
initiate a new series of complaints as new evidence arose. This went on
nonstop for up to 12 years, as did the silver manipulation. It was
basically between them and me, and they disregarded me. There was
nothing I could do about it, except start all over again.
Around 1996-97, I was introduced to the Internet and began to record
my thoughts there. I still wrote to the authorities, and the silver
manipulation continued, but others started to see what I was seeing.
Others began to speak out about the manipulation in silver. People
started to become outraged over the manipulation. I think this makes all
the difference in the world. Regulators and government officials only
seem to react when enough folks get angry. Precisely because so many
regular people seem to be upset by this issue, I believe the regulators
will be forced to act soon. If they don't, they will be swept up with
the real manipulators when this thing blows.
The key issue here is the excessive short position by the dealers on
the COMEX. It has been instrumental in the 20 year silver manipulation.
Let me be clear - without the uneconomic and outsized naked dealer short
position, the price would be many times what it is currently. Take away
that dealer naked short position, and there is no more silver
manipulation. This is a problem for the dealers - they can't get out of
their short position. Sure, they can engineer sell-offs to cause
technical fund and small speculator liquidations (like we've been
witnessing), but they can't completely cover their entire short
position. That's because there is no one willing to take their place on
the short side. The dealers are stuck. They can't just cover or buy back
their shorts because that would cause the price to explode and expose
them to massive losses and a legal quagmire. Since they can't cover,
their short position remains intact, as does the manipulation.
But time is not on the side of the dealers. The clock is ticking
against them. That's because of the real supply/demand situation and the
deficit. Sooner or later, their uneconomic short position will consume
them. That's guaranteed by the law of supply and demand. In fact, there
are two recent developments that promise to put serious pressure on the
manipulative shorts. For one, we have recently evolved into pronounced
deficits and shortages for a good number of base metals, like copper,
nickel, lead, steel, and a host of other commodities. The deficits and
shortages in all these commodities are as a result of surging world
demand, principally caused by strong demand from East Asia. Prices are
up sharply and inventories are down sharply. Like all these commodities,
silver is demographically and economically sensitive. As I've written
before, if the world economy is strongly demanding copper, lead, nickel
and other commodities, it is impossible for silver not to also be in
strong demand. This is not good for the shorts.
The second recent development putting pressure on the manipulative
shorts is what I wrote in the body of this article, namely possible
regulator involvement. Thousands of regular investors are putting
pressure on the regulators to address their legitimate concerns. This is
a bonus particular to silver, and not any other commodity. It has the
potential to blow the market sky-high, by terminating the decades' old
manipulation. In fact, I think the regulators may be forced to give the
silver issue a full and fair trial. That’s all we want; nothing more,
nothing less. If they can throw the book at Martha Stewart, the
government can, at the very least, look at the dealers' silver books.
Those dealers have caused a lot more economic harm that Ms. Stewart ever
did. And the CFTC has obstructed justice a heck of a lot more, as well. |