Hi Ken, The Commercial net short position dropped another 9,915 contracts to total 150,416
I'm pleased to say that your guesstimate total of 149,753 placed you into the top 25.......
GOLD - COMMODITY EXCHANGE INC. Code-088691 FUTURES ONLY POSITIONS AS OF 11/08/05 | --------------------------------------------------------------| NONREPORTABLE NON-COMMERCIAL | COMMERCIAL | TOTAL | POSITIONS --------------------------|-----------------|-----------------|----------------- LONG | SHORT |SPREADS | LONG | SHORT | LONG | SHORT | LONG | SHORT -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- (CONTRACTS OF 100 TROY OUNCES) OPEN INTEREST: 317,076 COMMITMENTS 167,250 44,139 30,469 67,808 218,224 265,527 292,832 51,549 24,244
CHANGES FROM 11/01/05 (CHANGE IN OPEN INTEREST: -17,394) -13,304 -5,847 438 -1,721 -11,636 -14,587 -17,045 -2,807 -349
PERCENT OF OPEN INTEREST FOR EACH CATEGORY OF TRADERS 52.7 13.9 9.6 21.4 68.8 83.7 92.4 16.3 7.6
NUMBER OF TRADERS IN EACH CATEGORY (TOTAL TRADERS: 246) 131 56 34 36 43 183 122
Hi Ken, Surprisingly, with the COMEX Gold total open interest rising by 7643 contracts, the commercial net short position only rose by 3,863. This seems like a fairly friendly number and could lend some support the PM shares going into today's close.
Next week's rise will prolly be a shocker based on the OI gain of the first two days of the new reporting period.
GOLD - COMMODITY EXCHANGE INC. Code-088691 FUTURES ONLY POSITIONS AS OF 11/15/05 | --------------------------------------------------------------| NONREPORTABLE NON-COMMERCIAL | COMMERCIAL | TOTAL | POSITIONS --------------------------|-----------------|-----------------|----------------- LONG | SHORT |SPREADS | LONG | SHORT | LONG | SHORT | LONG | SHORT -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- (CONTRACTS OF 100 TROY OUNCES) OPEN INTEREST: 324,719 COMMITMENTS 177,421 47,735 28,940 67,453 221,732 273,814 298,407 50,905 26,312
CHANGES FROM 11/08/05 (CHANGE IN OPEN INTEREST: 7,643) 10,171 3,596 -1,529 -355 3,508 8,287 5,575 -644 2,068
PERCENT OF OPEN INTEREST FOR EACH CATEGORY OF TRADERS 54.6 14.7 8.9 20.8 68.3 84.3 91.9 15.7 8.1
NUMBER OF TRADERS IN EACH CATEGORY (TOTAL TRADERS: 258) 138 58 34 35 44 192 124
By: Brady Willett, FallStreet.com November 23, 2005
On March 29, 1999 the Dow Jones Industrial Average closed above 10,000 for the first time. As the floor traders cheered, CNBC guests adorned “Dow 10K” rally hats, and the media wrote stories about the ‘historic’ event, the investor could not help but describe the scene idiotic. After all, whether the Dow is trading at 9999.99 or 10,000.01 makes little different to the fundamental value of the 30-stock composite.
Suffice to say, numbers like Dow 10,000 can be psychologically important over the shortest of terms, but are trivial over the longest of terms.
Gold’s Psychological Resistance Levels
Since the Washington Agreement was penned in 1999 (which occurred shortly after gold tested $250 an ounce), gold has had to battle two psychologically important trading levels. The first battle to regain $300 an ounce was waged for almost 3-years, and was not broken until the sixth try. The second battle, at $400 an ounce, began on December 2003 and probably ended after nine attempts in September 2004. What about the third battle? December gold reached an intra-day high of $495.9 an ounce yesterday…
Rally hats or the death of the latest bull rush?
Before speculating on what may happen if, and when, $500 an ounce is touched, a quick overview of the gold market is prudent. First and foremost, since holding above $300 an ounce in 2002 the gold bull – at least when studying the COT statistics - has been a relatively predictable animal. Today the COT numbers are screaming sell, and will likely continue to scream sell until the commercials are able to cover part of their position at lower prices. As for the possibility of the commercials covering for losses and/or defaulting, since this is only going to happen once (and will likely result in a full out gold mania), it is difficult to suggest that the recent rally in gold is the rally. Speculations about the commercials being cornered have emerged during every major rally since 1999, and have repeatedly been proven wrong.
Another point of interest relating to gold is the positive demand fundamentals. As more investors begin to fear inflation gold’s safe haven status has reemerged, as hedge funds cash out some of their oil/equity bets a well pocketed commercial enemy has climbed on the long side, and as central banks realize the folly of paper currencies the prospect of unexpected central banks sales is dissipating. That these positives are in play, not to mention the bullishness of producer dehedging and USD decoupling, is reason enough to suggest that gold’s uptrend will remain intact regardless of any potential correction.
With these things in mind, you would think that a firm handle on what will happen when $500 an ounce is touched can be Unfortunately it can not. Rather, anecdotal information suggests that demand in India is hitting a wall (this is bearish), the extra tiny small spec net long position suggests that the herd has not joined in the party (this is bullish, but maybe the small players are in GLD?), recent history suggests that a break above $500 an ounce will not be sustained on the first try (bearish), and common sense says that if gold attracts anymore attention some central banks will try to suppress the price of gold by dumping more gold (at least those central banks whose interests are aligned with US dollar hegemony).
So what can really be said about $500 an ounce? That something exciting will happen when it is touched because it is a psychologically important trading level. In the context of keeping up the boring unbacked fiat norm, you have to think that any more excitement marks a near term top.
Forget about $500
Gold will one day tackle $600, $700, and $800+ an ounce USD, and by then discussion about $500 an ounce gold will be forgotten. But these days are unlikely to arrive until either the US dollar bear resumes, a financial calamity arrives, or a Liu Qibing gold trader surfaces. Although the price of gold may be rising partially in anticipation of an event like these, none is apparent right now.
In short, gold is supposedly rallying for so many reasons today that you cannot help but think that “$500 Gold!” is one of those reasons. If this is the case, when, and if, the correction begins those investors betting on $500.01 will leave the market unceremoniously. As for the possibility of sustainable rush above $500 an ounce, gold has reached yearly highs in the month of December in each of the last three years. Why not a fourth?
Incidentally, after trading as low as 7181.47 on October 11, 2002 the Dow reacquired the 10,000 mark on December 11, 2003. Traders cracked a brief smile, CNBC thought about but did not dust off the 10K hats, and the media portrayed the event for what it really was: a non event. When will Dow 10,000 be safely achieved? Probably not before $500 gold…
Disclosure: I recently made last weeks comments - “I would be a seller of some psychical gold just below $500 an ounce” - a reality, but I have not sold any silver. Todd and I own gold/silver coins and bullion.
Hi Ken, The COMEX Gold Futures open interest went up 25,884 contracts while the commercial net short position gained 25,962 contracts to 180,241, about 33K under the recent all time high of 213K.
Leaving some room for a bit more near term upside, methinks.
GOLD - COMMODITY EXCHANGE INC. Code-088691 FUTURES ONLY POSITIONS AS OF 11/22/05 | --------------------------------------------------------------| NONREPORTABLE NON-COMMERCIAL | COMMERCIAL | TOTAL | POSITIONS --------------------------|-----------------|-----------------|----------------- LONG | SHORT |SPREADS | LONG | SHORT | LONG | SHORT | LONG | SHORT -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- (CONTRACTS OF 100 TROY OUNCES) OPEN INTEREST: 350,603 COMMITMENTS 201,765 38,783 33,292 56,380 236,621 291,437 308,696 59,166 41,907
CHANGES FROM 11/15/05 (CHANGE IN OPEN INTEREST: 25,884) 24,344 -8,952 4,352 -11,073 14,889 17,623 10,289 8,261 15,595
PERCENT OF OPEN INTEREST FOR EACH CATEGORY OF TRADERS 57.5 11.1 9.5 16.1 67.5 83.1 88.0 16.9 12.0
NUMBER OF TRADERS IN EACH CATEGORY (TOTAL TRADERS: 265) 147 52 40 35 48 205 125