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Thursday, March 28, 2024

Manipulative Gold ‘Fat Finger’ Or Algo Trade Worth 1.24 Billion USD

Courtesy of ZeroHedge. View original post here.

Submitted by GoldCore.

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Gold’s London AM fix this morning was USD 1,661.25, EUR 1,253.02, and GBP

1,024.70 per ounce. Yesterday’s AM fix was USD 1,662.50, EUR 1,256.61 and GBP

1,021.44 per ounce.

Silver is trading at $30.85/oz, €23.37/oz and £19.10/oz. Platinum is trading

at $1,570.00/oz, palladium at $677.60/oz and rhodium at $1,350/oz.

Gold rose $3.80 or 0.23% in New York yesterday and closed at $1,666.10/oz.

However, there were more peculiar goings on in the gold market which saw one

massive sell order knock prices lower, prior to gold gathering itself and moving

higher.



Cross Currency Table –

(Bloomberg)

Bullion traded sideways in Asia before slight weakness and has dipped

marginally in early European trading.

Gold may complete its 6th day of price increases, its best run since August,

as business activity in the US expanded at its slowest pace since November 2009,

creating demand for gold as a heading instrument and a safe haven. 

Gold’s technicals are mixed after April’s slight loss (-0.2%) meant that gold

has now had 3 consecutive monthly losses – the first since 2000.

However, gold has a bullish outside reversal week last week and the higher

quarterly close of a 6.7% gain in Q1 2012, and 11 consecutive years of annual

gains mean that the long term technicals remain favourable.

Bullion is now 6.5% higher this year and heading for its 12th straight annual

advance as demand continues as a hedge against inflation and central banks

continue to debase fiat currencies. 

Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke said April 25 that he’s prepared to “do more” if

needed to spur the economy.

Investors are watching weekend elections in France & Greece and a

European Central Bank meeting on Thursday, after data showed that Spain sank

into recession in the first quarter.

Palladium hit its highest price in 6 weeks and is trading near

$686.75/oz.

Manipulative Gold ‘Fat Finger’ Or Algo Trade Worth $1.24

Billion

The gold market was briefly shaken by an unusually large

early morning sell order, which triggered a brief trading halt in gold futures

and left traders questioning whether the transaction was a mistake and the

motivation of the seller.



Gold 3 Day Chart –

(Bloomberg)

Gold fell $14 in one minute despite no breaking financial and economic news

and despite no movement in the dollar, oil, equity or bond markets.

There was only the insignificant personal income and spending numbers – which

came in slightly better than expected and could not justify such quick

falls.

CME Group Inc’s Comex division recorded an unusually large transaction of

7,500 gold futures during just one minute of trading. The sale took out blocks

of bids as large as 84 contracts in one fell swoop and cut prices down $15 to

$1,648.80 a troy ounce.

The sharp losses triggered a 10-second trading halt in June-delivery gold

futures, CME told Dow Jones Newswires Tatyana Shumsky.

“The market was given a short period to recalibrate and … it was for 10

seconds,” a CME spokesman said. “It only happened in gold futures, in the June

gold contract.”

Gold traders buzzed with speculation that the transaction was an input error

– a so-called “fat finger” trade. “Or a Gold Finger as it might be known in the

bullion market,” traders at Citi joked in a note to clients.

The massive size of the transaction – 750,000 troy ounces worth more than

$1.24 billion – led to speculation that it was either a mistake by a trader or

that an entity wished to manipulate the market lower.

Such large trades have frequently been seen at month and quarter beginning

and ends. Yesterday was the last trading day of the month. They have also been

seen when Ben Bernanke has been making important statements regarding the dollar

and the outlook for the US economy.

The nature of the massive sell order, one of many seen in recent months,

suggested that the seller was not motivated by profit and may have had other

motives. Such large trades are rarely conducted amid very thin trading

volumes.

Trading yesterday was expected to be quiet as market participants in China

and Japan were out on holiday and many European traders were preparing for May

Day holidays today.

“No one who has the account size and the money to trade thousands of gold

contracts would do it in one transaction; that’s just stupid,” said one

trader.



Silver 3 Day Chart –

(Bloomberg)

It seems likely that the seller was either a large hedge fund or institution

as the collateral required to purchase 7,500 contracts is high. The seller would

have had to have deposited $ 75.9 million in cash with a broker.

There was a suggestion in the Reuters Global Gold Forum that the selling may

have been due to algorithm trading or computer driven.

The trade could be as a result of the shift to electronic trading. Computer

trading systems are vulnerable to input errors, as they do not ‘question’ the

order before executing the transaction.

By contrast, when most order flow would pass through the Comex floor where

human traders processed the deals, potential errors stand higher chances of

being intercepted and there is a higher level of transparency.

“You would definitely [verify a trade this big] before you executed it,” said

one Comex floor broker.

However, the trade is unlikely to have been a keystroke error as silver also

saw substantial selling at the same time and similar price falls.

This suggests that the seller wished to see gold and silver prices lower.

 Some traders suggest that there may be High Frequency Trading (HFT) programmes

that can see where stop loss orders are placed and sell in order to force stop

loss selling – then buying back and thus making a quick profit. 

It will further fuel allegations that certain Wall Street banks, either alone

or in conjunction with the Federal Reserve and US Treasury, are intervening in

and manipulating prices in the precious metal markets.  

The Gold Anti Trust Action Committee (GATA) and other knowledgeable market

participants have alleged that this is continuing to be done in order to

maintain faith in the US dollar and the US capital markets.

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