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Comment for Sunshine Act Sunshine Act Meeting: March 25, 2010

  • From: Eric Juzenas
    Organization(s):

    Comment No: 22860
    Date: 3/22/2010

    Comment Text:

    10-005
    COMMENT
    CL-02561
    From:
    Sent:
    To:
    Subject:
    Attach:
    Juzenas, Eric
    Monday, March 22, 2010 1:31 PM
    Metals Meeting
    FW: CFTC Metals Meeting Comments
    20100321 CF TCletterMarchMtg. docx
    From:
    LLCCMAN @aol.com [mailto: LLCCMAN @aol.com]
    Sent:
    Sunday, March 21, 2010 8:20 PM
    To:
    Juzenas, Eric
    Subject:
    CFTC Metals Meeting Comments
    Greetings Mr. Juzenas,
    Attached please find a comment letter regarding the upcoming CFTC meeting on position limits for precious
    metals.
    Can you please also forward it to the commissioners and to the secretariat for entry into the public record?
    If not, then can you please send the email addresses so I can send it to them.
    Thank you very much, and good luck with the meetings.
    My address and contact info is not shown in the letter, but is below for reference.
    Gene Arensberg
    Got Gold Report
    2502 McKeever Road
    Rosharon, TX 77583
    US cell 281-615-3394March 21,2010
    Hon. Gary Gensler
    Chairman, Commodities Futures Trading Commission
    3 Lafayette Center
    1155
    21
    st
    St. NW
    Washington, DC 50581
    Via email as instructed to Eric
    Juzenas, [email protected]~ov,
    with copies to the Commissioners.
    ¯
    Re: Meeting to discuss the establishment of position limits for precious metals futures markets
    scheduled for March 25.
    Dear Chairman Gensler and Commissioners,
    Certainly you all would agree with this statement: "No futures trader should be able to dominate the
    market or be able to achieve such an overwhelming size of positioning on one side of the market that it
    would intimidate the majority of traders in that market." Such a statement should be foremost in the
    policy totem pole of futures market regulators. However, the fact is that just such an egregious
    situation currently exists today in the U.S. precious metals futures markets, up to now apparently with
    the Commission's blessing.
    The American people want to know why this Commission tolerates obvious and unfair market
    dominance by just a few well-connected, well-informed, well-funded and politically clever entities.
    Further, the American people look to you to end this inequity as one goal of this historic meeting.
    Market dominance by a privileged few traders can only be accomplished if those few traders are granted
    a trading advantage, either by the rules themselves or by the regulator's granting of exemptions to the
    rules. Truly fair and free markets cannot exist so long as one or just a few traders are allowed trading
    dominance.
    Problem Not Size Limits, Rather it is Exemptions to Limits
    In the U.S. precious metals futures markets today an elite few traders are able to gain a trading
    advantage over all the other traders because the Commodities Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) and
    the futures exchanges routinely grant exemptions to position limits - in virtually unlimited size.
    The statutes say generally that "bona fide hedgers" should be granted exemptions to position limits
    provided that the positions are for legitimate hedging purposes. But, Mr. Chairman and Commissioners,
    nowhere is it written that these exemptions should be given in such huge size that they overwhelm the
    trading of that market. Yet, that is exactly the condition we find in the gold and silver futures markets
    from time to time.Because the Commission allows the mere possession of (or direct control of) physical metal inventory as
    a qualifying criteria for hedgers seeking exemptions to position limits, and since there are actually a very
    small number of entities who possess or control vast amounts of physical metal, there are in reality only
    a precious few traders capable of using and abusing the privilege of exemptions to size limits.
    When the criteria for exemption looks only to a trader's claimed inventory for qualification, while
    ignoring the impact on the entire market an overly-large one-way position will ultimately have, then it is
    the exemption process and the implementation of it that perverts the price discovery mechanism of the
    futures markets.
    Such overwhelmingly large exemptions to position limits have the direct result of allowing one side of
    the market to become dominant and very highly concentrated, with way too large a proportion of the
    actual trading dependent upon (and subject to the effects of) the actions of a very few traders the
    Commission deems "bona fide hedgers."
    The problem is not, repeat not, an issue of the speculative position limits being too large. The
    Commission need not reduce the size of the current position limits if the Commission deems it necessary
    to impose its own limits rather than allowing the exchanges to regulate trading size.
    Neither should the Commission bother with determining whether or not any particular trader is worthy
    of being granted such an obvious trading advantage. Instead, the Commission should grant no trader an
    advantage, period. The Commission should adopt new position limits which are blind as to the
    individual trader's needs or goals, looking only to the integrity and fairness of the market itself as the
    prime goal, and then rigorously enforce those new limits on both sides of the trading battlefield. (That is
    only if the Commission quits granting exemptions to position limits which are out of all proportion to the
    total open interest, as suggested below.)
    We reviewed the prefatory questions supplied by Commission staff before preparing this memorandum.
    One question staff should have asked, but didn't is:
    "Does allowing virtually unlimited size exemptions
    to position limits cause distortions in the futures markets or provide an unfair advantage to one side
    of the equation?"
    The answer to that question is "yes, obviously."
    Futures Markets - Bullion Bank Playground
    Again, the problem is not the current position limits. The problem is that some traders abuse (or at least
    have the opportunity to abuse) exemptions to those position limits and the possibility exists for those
    traders to dominate and intimidate the entire market because of that.Position limits for futures are laughable so long as the Commission continues to allow virtually unlimited
    size "exemptions" to a very few "hedgers" in the metals markets. When traders on the speculative side
    of the market are strictly limited in their position taking (as they are now), while two very large U.S.
    based bullion banks are granted exemptions which allow them to take opposing positions 10, 15 or even
    20 times the supposed speculative limits, clearly there is an imbalance of trading strength granted by
    this Commission to the hedging or short side of the trading pit.
    The current exemption regimen therefore appears to favor the short, or hedging side.
    As of March 2, for example, less than four and probably just two U.S. banks
    1
    held a net short position of
    30,286 contracts in the small silver COMEX futures market when the entire open interest on that market
    was 108,248 contracts open (just two banks holding 28% of the entire market net short). 2 Those two
    bank's net short position dwarfs and overwhelms the trading "horsepower" of the largest speculative
    traders where even the four largest combined longs amounted to 14.4% of the open interest.
    The U.S. banks' net short positioning relative to the total open interest of the COMEX silver market is
    plotted in the graph just below.
    For 19 months prior to December, 2009 there were two U.S. banks reported. Beginning in December, 2009 the
    CFTC quit reporting the number of banks if less than four, presumably at the request of one or both of the banks.
    See: March 2 CFTC Participation of Banks in Futures and Options report.Note, please, that the huge jump in U.S. bank net short positioning for silver occurred at roughly the
    same time as the Bear Stearns "take-under" in 2008. Note also that the overly-large concentration of
    net short positioning by these two banks continued at least through March 2, 2010. Just two banks hold
    over one-quarter of all the COMEX action net short. No other trader or pair of traders even comes close
    to that market dominance.
    We believe the U.S. banks are most likely JP Morgan Chase and HSBC, although their identity is guarded
    and kept from the American people by the Commission by convenient statute. However, through the
    dedicated research of others, particularly the Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee (GATA), led by William
    J. (Bill) Murphy and Chris Powell, we believe there is little question these bullion banks are directly
    responsible for the overwhelmingly large interests consistently on one side, the short side, of the bullion
    markets.
    3
    While we would not openly accuse any particular bank of using position-intimidation or of attempting to
    manipulate prices lower, we would point out to this Commission that allowing just one or two traders
    virtually unlimited size in the futures markets is tantamount to encouraging that trader to use the
    weight of its own trading to achieve a price outcome favorable to them and contrary to the price
    discovery mechanism the futures markets are supposed to be.
    Bullion Banks
    "do
    it" Because They Can
    In Texas English: To us it seems the CFTC winks at position limits when it comes to a few preferred
    players. That is why so many now believe that those elite bullion banks consider the COMEX as their
    own trading playground. It is like allowing JP Morgan to use a battleship and an aircraft carrier against
    the natives using bows and arrows in the small COMEX silver frog pond.
    While one might argue that an entity holding a little more than a quarter of the open interest net short
    is not dominant or intimidating because that would mean that three-quarters of the market is left, we
    would argue otherwise. Primarily because under the rules today no one is granted an equally powerful
    exemption to the position limits for the opposite side of the market, the long side.
    Therefore, ifJP Morgan wanted to or felt compelled to, it certainly could dominate or intimidate the rest
    of the market participants simply by taking ever larger net short positions until the real market demand
    has been artificially and temporarily sated. They are able to by virtue of their ability to claim an
    exemption to position limits purely because they hold or control metal inventory in excess of the entire
    market open interest for silver.
    No trader on the long side has that "weapon" and everyone knows it. Only a very few bullion banks can
    use that weapon; they do so with this Commission's blessing and everyone knows it. There is nothing
    equitable about that.
    See GATA memo dated March 18, 2010 to the CFTC in preparation for the CFTC hearings.Further, the above graph compares the two U.S. bank's net short position to the total open interest of
    the COMEX on March 2, 2010. In order to understand just how concentrated that U.S. bank positioning
    really is, we need to see it in terms of all the commercial net short positioning. It is there where we see
    just how dominant these two entities are in the COMEX silver market.
    As of March 2, the two U.S. banks held 135 silver contracts long and 30,421 contracts short for a net
    short position of 30,286 contracts. On that same date, all traders classed by the CFTC as "commercial,"
    all of them, held 31,034 contracts long and 71,974 contracts short for a collective commercial net short
    position of 40,940 contracts.
    4
    Therefore just these two well-connected bullion banks held a staggering
    74% of all the commercial net short positioning on the COMEX. The two banks' net short positioning
    relative to all traders the CFTC classes as commercial is shown in the graph below,
    s
    At times during the last year and a half these two U.S. banks have been responsible for as much as 99%
    (not a misprint) of all the commercial net short positioning on the COMEX.
    CFTC commitments of traders report for March 2, 2010.
    Data from CFTC Bank Participation in Futures and Options reports, Cash Market for silver.In no other market is there anything close to this kind of overwhelmingly concentrated positioning on
    either side of the trading pit. The only reason it is possible is because this Commission allows it and
    apparently approves of it. There is a similar, but somewhat less dominant situation in the much larger
    gold futures market, but we will confine our comments to silver for this memo.
    In short (no pun intended), the current exemption policy allows an imbalance in the futures markets
    which can only be corrected by placing limits on the number of contracts ANY trader may hold,
    regardless of their bias, measured as a percentage of the total open interest at any given time. Limits
    which recognize that the futures market is not large enough to allow unlimited exemptions for traders
    who hold inventories too large to hedge on this bourse.
    Time for a Level Playing Field
    Speaking as to question number 6a in the staff memorandum, which asked:
    "If the Commission were to
    establish position limits for metals derivatives markets, what types of exemptions from such limits should
    be permitted ?
    a) The statute states exemptions should only be granted to bona fide hedgers. What should be the
    qualifying factors for an entity to be determined to be a bona fide hedger?"
    The Commission should ignore a trader's inventory of metal as a qualifying tenant of an exemption
    because there are only a very few traders who hold or control vast amounts of precious metals and the
    ones that do - control an overwhelmingly large amount of the metal. Therefore they are able to claim
    an exemption for virtually any size in the futures markets and are able or have the potential to
    overwhelm and intimidate the opposing side of the market. The futures market is not large enough to
    allow such beneficial treatment to a few giant bullion banks.
    Rather than allowing a few large holders of metal to dominate a market, position limits should be based
    on the market's relative size only, without regard to the trader's advantages or disadvantages in that
    market. The market should be blind as to the trader's needs. It should instead be concerned with the
    integrity and fairness of the market itself.
    Position Limits Should Favor No One
    In order to insure a fair market for all participants, ALL participants, even bona fide hedgers, should be
    restricted to no more than a reasonable percentage of the open interest at any one time. Both in the
    spot month and in deferred or future months.
    Just as no single trader (or cabal of single-minded traders) should be able to amass a dominant position
    of tens of thousands of contracts on the long side, neither should any one trader be able to do so on the
    opposite side. There are other, larger and less regulated markets in which such large players can hedge
    via swaps, options, forwards, over-the-counter derivatives, etc.The Commission should not let the arguments of a few very large players determine its policy for the
    entire market.
    As a suggestion for the silver market, the limits could be set initially at no more than 10% of the open
    interest or 10,000 contracts (whichever is the higher) for all participants, long, short or spreading, in all
    contract months, with no more than 3,000 contracts in the spot month.
    Then, as or if the open interest increases beyond 100,000 contracts, in minimum 10,000 contract marks,
    all traders would be able to increase the position size limit by 1,000 contracts (10% of the increase in
    open interest) in all months (and across all CFTC regulated markets), or an additional 300 contracts (10%
    of the increase in the open interest) in the spot month, so that in no case could any trader hold more
    than 10% of the market in any trading period. Again, this assumes that the Commission no longer allows
    any trader an overly large exemption to the limits.
    Otherwise, if the Commission allows any trader an exemption to size limits, for any reason, the limits for
    traders on the opposing side should be increased by the exact same amount. Otherwise the potential
    for abuse of those exemptions will follow.
    Don't Let Bankers Determine CFTC Policy This Time
    In conclusion, granting exemptions to position limits without regard to the imbalances and market
    intimidation such exemptions cause is the prime issue this Commission should focus on and correct
    now.
    We very much hope that you, Chariman Gensler, and all the CFTC Commissioners will take this historic
    opportunity to finally bring balance to the U.S. precious metals futures markets and end the abuse of it
    by a few powerful actors.
    This Commission should immediately adopt fair position limits for the precious metals markets which
    will no longer favor a few large bullion banks and instead restore a level playing field for all market
    participants.
    To do otherwise now will confirm that this Commission is partial to the bullion banks and contrary to the
    will of the American people. To do otherwise will perpetuate the common impression of the U.S.
    futures markets as a playground for miscreant bullion banks with this Commission unable or unwilling to
    intercede.
    If we can be of any assistance to you or your staff in formulating the new, fair trading policy, do not
    hesitate to contact us.
    Respectfully,Gene Arensberg
    Got Gold Report
    GotGoldReport.com
    (Address sent separately)
    CC: CFTC Commissioner Michael Dunn
    CC: CFTC Commissioner Scott O'Malia
    CC: CFTC Commissioner Jill E. Sommers
    CC: CFTC Commissioner Bart Chilton
    CC: CFTC Secretary David Stawick
    CC: CFTC General Counsel Dan Berkovitz