Something Just Broke in London's Gold Market

Originally published at: https://peakprosperity.com/something-just-broke-in-londons-gold-market/

The recent rise in gold prices isn’t simply due to tariffs. That’s retail-level propaganda designed to keep us off the scent.

Vince Lanci explained to me that while tariffs might have initially caused some movement, they don’t account for the sustained increase we’re seeing now.

Instead, it seems like a larger, more systemic issue is at play. Is the long-running “fractional reserve gold lending” scheme finally breaking down? Is it financial elephants pre-positioning for Basel III’s new treatment of gold as a tier I asset, meaning it occupies the same level of security as cash and high quality government bonds? Or is it signaling something more sinister and systemic?

Vince says that the key players in the market, like the LBMA and major banks, don’t really care if gold’s prices goes higher. But they do care if it rises too quickly. They spend a lot of time and attention on keeping the price of gold well-contained.

To avoid rapid price increases they have a gigantic paper pump they use to dump virtually unlimited quantities of ‘paper gold’ on the markets are key times to drive prices down.

Okay, fine. That’s the game, know the rules.

But rarely, from time to time, things get out of whack and there’s a mad dash for physical gold to cover the bets, and that’s where we find ourselves now.

The way that shows up is in something called the gold lease rate. If you need physical gold, but don’t want to buy it outright for whatever complicated set of reasons, you can lease it. When lease rates rise, it means gold is in tight supply and getting harder to find.

Like it is now:

The pace and height of the explosive rise in gold lease rates indicate that something has snapped in the market.

If we’re lucky, it’s just a simple unwinding of trades where too many traders and bullion banks got caught on the wrong side of things. Hey, it happens.

But not like this, and not to this extent. Which means it could be that there’s a much bigger problem brewing. If so, gold is indicating that it will be larger and more muscular than even the Great Financial Crisis of 2008.

Is this happening? And how would we know? More importantly, how can you protect yourself from the fallout?

Tune in to hear Vince Lanci and I discuss the topic. And be sure to keep a close eye on the price of gold and silver…

Show notes:

Repatriation and Global Trust

Vince highlighted a significant trend: countries are repatriating their gold. This isn’t just about tariffs; it’s about a shift in global trust. Nations like China and India are buying and repatriating gold at unprecedented rates, possibly in anticipation of using gold as a monetary unit or as a hedge against geopolitical instability. This movement suggests a lack of trust in traditional financial systems and a pivot towards tangible assets.

Silver’s Unique Position

Silver is experiencing backwardation, a situation where the current price is higher than future prices, indicating immediate demand. This is unusual for silver, which typically doesn’t see such market behavior. Vince shared insights into how industrial demand, particularly from countries like China, is driving this trend. The backwardation in silver suggests a potential squeeze, where demand outstrips available supply, leading to price volatility.

Key Data

  • 500 tons of gold have been delivered to COMEX vaults in the past two months.
  • Silver lease rates have spiked to 8%.
  • India imported 2,600 tons of silver from the UAE, a significant portion of global output.

Predictions

  • Gold prices could quietly rise to $3,500.
  • Silver may become unobtainable as an investment asset once gold is exhausted.
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I feel so happy! At last, a monetary discussion I understand. Thanks, Chris for interjecting the simpler asides to clarify for the financially slower members of the tribe (raises hand) and make sure everyone gets it.

So the gold market at the endgame is kind of like musical chairs. Or maybe a better analogy is like how the airline routinely oversell seats on a plane, using historical data on the % of no-shows for every flight throughout the day. It all works until it doesn’t, and then the horde of rabid passengers waiving their tickets in anger because “their” seat has been sold out from under them. And then the increasing amounts the airline is willing to give passengers to give up their seat, and the increasing sense of doom for those on the standby list.

I guess your airline seat is hypothetical and only really yours when your butt is in the seat and the plane has achieved liftoff.

I’m only at minute 30 so back to the video, just wanted to stop and thank you and your guest for a deep yet simple dive.

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Im a stupid old lady…and i dont understand much, but it was a pleasure to listen to rwo very intelligent men figure out together what could possibly be going on.
Thank you both very much indeed…
Actually, thank you seems a bit inadequate…as the world has become one big gaslit tv program, this really restores my faith in the intelligence of some of our species…

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I wanna hear how Soros tried to corner the silver market!

Great discussion, his 3-6 month timeline lines up perfect with what I’ve been hoping happens.

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Chris the BOE do not use mice, he clearly said they use delivery SLOTHS.

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I cannot remembercnow…but my grandfather tried to corner the silver market…and .ost. he lived off of my grandmotbers money the rest of his life. Not very nice,either

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Had to have n
Been 100 years from now

Holy shit, you’re right!

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Do you have access to the chart data? I’d love to see it going back to year 2,000

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https://x.com/Bubblebathgirl/status/1888784705639592286?t=_ugJ6Plhv8oOGRVIlVKNVQ&s=19

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As retarded as it sounds, I’ve been stacking nickels for years, & separating between “fake” pennies & copper.
Nickels are a real value circulating.
A nickel squeeze could see nickel @ $50/lb., & possibly calculated by the ounce.
It’s impractical to waste time with small change.
But, if you’re going to exercise like a monk, range-of-motion strengthening would increase with say… bars with sufficient thickness ID/OD cell walls, loaded with nickels/copper pennies.

So if you visit, leave my bars alone.

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Some would call it, quite literally, the cost of doing business.

I think we can spring a few thousand to make pennies or change them to another metal. If we can print dollars by the trillions, why not print a few pennies.

Are we really ready to ask kids who can’t count change to start rounding up and down while they are at it, Yikes!

…is the round up for charity trend to program us for the pennies demise…hmmmm

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If I was a clever retailer who deals with a lot of cash, I’d secretly raise my prices .03 cents and then advertise to the public “We round down!” Or simply raise all my prices to pencil out to ending in .05 cent increments including sales tax. I’m old enough to remember the silver content of US coins being dropped from 90% in 1965. I was just a kid, but I wish I had started pulling all the pre-65 silver I came across. I doubt the wisdom of now hoarding pennies. Besides they’re going to need the copper for the data centers!! :grin:

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I’ve been separating out and saving “real” copper pennies for a long time myself. More recently I’ve started saving pretty much all coins I get since I’m thinking that at some point hyperinflation seems quite likely here in the US and coins being real metal should maintain some material worth at least.

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You’ve gotta have a LOT of pennies. Storage must be a problem.

You might think that, but actually, no, it isn’t all that many pennies even though I’ve been setting aside the real copper ones for 10 to 15 years now. I also use cash for the bulk of my in person purchases. So I’m dealing with coins a lot. However, most pennies you get these days are the copper plated zinc ones. 1981 or older are getting more and more rare to find. All the ones I’ve pulled out could fit in a 1 quart jar.

On the other hand, I am something of a frugal minimalist so perhaps most people still do far more transactions than I do over time and gather more pennies.

Ok, so I do not understand the concept of leasing gold.

I thought the whole point was to own it. If I own gold and then lease it out, who actually has a claim to it?

So I’m a bit confused as to this gold leasing massive increase. Could someone please explain briefly how this works :slight_smile:

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Here’s a simple example. Let’s say I have a 400 oz gold bar and I lease it to you as collateral for what you anticipate will be a short 3 month bridge loan from your bank for your manufacturing plant expansion. You can list the bar as an asset to your bank in your loan application. Everything is fine as long as you can pay off your bridge loan in three months. Now let’s say your plant in North Carolina is utterly destroyed by a hurricane. You have no product to sell and no way to produce more in the short and medium term. You can’t make payroll and your insurance company is fighting your claim since flooding was not specifically covered by your policy. The bank wants to get paid or to take possession of your 400 oz gold bar. If you had the capital you could pay the bank or buy a 400 oz bar and take delivery to give to the bank. But you have insufficient capital. This could be further complicated if I have leased the same gold bar to two other customers, one of whom used it for collateral to build a tract of new houses now destroyed in the Palisades Fire. Who “owns” the gold bar? Beats me. :man_shrugging:t2:

A 400 oz gold bar might cost $1.16 million to buy and take possession of but only $5,000/month to lease. As the lease cost rises at some point it doesn’t make economic sense to lease it. It’s a great deal for me if I own/possess it as long I don’t get dragged into court by one of my leasers trying to take possession based on the wording of the lease contract. And as long as it doesn’t become public that I’ve leased the same gold bar to multiple customers.

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So this is fractional gold banking!

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