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January
11
2019

Questions Only the DOJ Can Get Answered
Theodore Butler

Reasonable questions should be answered reasonably. When such questions cannot be answered reasonably or at all, particularly by those with a responsibility for answering, something is wrong. A good number of such questions remain unanswered in silver and those not providing answers include the federal commodities regulator (the CFTC), the designated self-regulator (the CME Group), as well as the most important bank in the US, JPMorgan.

What constitutes a reasonable question in silver? I would define questions to be reasonable if they encompass occurrences known to be unprecedented either in silver or in any other market and in which the questions have been repeatedly asked, yet remain unanswered.  To be sure, there are several such unanswered questions in silver that date back as long as a decade; each one of which stands out in terms of potential significance, but taken together point to something being seriously out of kilter in the silver market.

Standing in the way of the questions being answered is that those who know, or should know the answers, just won’t provide the answers. But now the Department of Justice has burst upon the silver scene by virtue of its Nov 6 announcement of a criminal guilty plea for manipulation on the COMEX by a long time former trader for JPMorgan, as well as its clear statement that it is immersed in an ongoing investigation. Overnight, the prospects for the previously unanswered questions finally being addressed have greatly improved. Make no mistake, if the Justice Department asks the right questions, the ongoing silver manipulation will come to a screeching halt.

But if the Justice Department doesn’t ask the right questions, it may miss the financial crime of all time. In order to prevent what would be a great miscarriage of justice, allow me to suggest the questions that should be asked by the Justice Department of those who hold the answers, but have refused to answer, namely, the CFTC, the CME Group and JPMorgan, along with others.

1. How could it be legitimately possible for JPMorgan to never have taken a loss and only achieved profits when adding to COMEX silver short futures positions since March 2008? All told, since then, JPMorgan has amassed at least $3 billion in cumulative realized profits in trading COMEX silver futures from the short side. Is such an unprecedented feat possible in a market that wasn’t rigged?

2. How could it be legitimately possible for JPMorgan to amass, since April 2011, the largest physical stockpile of silver in history while at the same time being the predominant and controlling short holder of COMEX futures contracts? All told, JPMorgan has accumulated 150 to 180 million ounces of silver in its own and other COMEX-approved silver warehouses and as much as 650 million ounces away from the COMEX warehouse system.

3. Was JPMorgan the biggest buyer, either directly or through intermediators, of US Silver Eagles from the US Mint from 2011 through 2016, completely misusing the bullion coin program intended for retail coin collectors to its own advantage? Was JPMorgan the biggest buyer of Canadian Silver Maple Leafs over this time?

4. Was JPMorgan the architect and initiator of the unprecedented physical movement of metal that commenced in April 2011 and that has continued to this day in the COMEX-approved silver warehouses? Why does this physical movement exist only in COMEX silver warehouse inventories and in no other commodity? Since April 2011, more than 1.5 billion ounces of silver have been physically moved in and out from six COMEX-approved silver warehouses. Why?

5. Has JPMorgan used its position as custodian of the largest silver Exchange Traded Fund, SLV, as well as the leading Authorized Participant of the trust to accumulate physical silver clandestinely through share for metal conversions? Physical metal holdings are not required to be publicly disclosed and, in addition, JPMorgan is the master at concealing that which it doesn’t wish to be disclosed. Only the Justice Department can determine what JPMorgan holds or doesn’t hold in terms of physical silver.

You’ll note that all five questions involve JPMorgan’s dealings in silver and it’s no secret that is why I believe the bank is the prime manipulator of silver. Not being able to elicit responses from the bank or its primary regulators, the CFTC or the CME, it would be easy and highly appropriate for the Justice Department to demand answers.  After all, the Justice Department is investigating JPMorgan’s role in a silver manipulation (by virtue of its Nov 6 announcement) and it would be a shame if the only focus was on spoofing, which is just a tool of the manipulators.

At a minimum, if I am falsely maligning JPMorgan for alleging that it is manipulating the silver market, I should be made to stop. But if my allegations are close to being accurate (as I know them to be), then the bank has been involved in the most egregious market manipulation of all time. Either way, the Justice Department can settle the issue once and for all time by demanding that these questions be answered.

It has now been two months since the DOJ’s announcement on Nov 6 of the guilty plea and ongoing investigation and three months since the plea was first recorded and sealed on Oct 9. Obviously, the Justice Department had to be pursuing the matter for several months prior to the sealed guilty plea. Therefore, the Justice Department has spent the better part of 2018 looking into the matter of a COMEX silver manipulation. No entity is better equipped for such a task than the Justice Department.

Having raised the issue of a silver manipulation for more than 30 years and the specific allegation that JPMorgan was the main manipulator since 2008, there would be something wrong if I didn’t feel the involvement of the Justice Department was the most important development I have seen over both time periods. I have petitioned the CFTC and the CME for decades to no avail. It may turn out that I am putting too much faith in the Justice Department for confirming my allegations, but it is at the very pinnacle of a regulatory food chain that doesn’t go any higher. It would be unreasonable not to have faith that the DOJ will do the right thing.

 


 

 

After publishing unique precious metals commentary on the Internet since 1996, I have decided to offer a subscription service. The main reason for the change is that I felt somewhat restricted by my weekly format.


 


 

www.butlerresearch.com

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