jgrabar
4 년 전
Hi Pro -
Complaints have been filed on behalf of traders of gold, silver, platinum and palladium futures by traders who transacted in those contracts between January 2008 and July 2016.
A pair of commodities traders sued Scotiabank on Friday after the Toronto-based bank admitted in a $127 million settlement with the U.S. government to an eight-year scheme to manipulate the market for precious metals futures contracts.
Casey Sterk and Kevin Maher filed their complaint in New Jersey federal court, accusing the bank of a spoofing scheme that was detailed by the U.S. Department of Justice and the U.S. Commodities Futures Trading Commission on Aug. 19, when the agencies announced Scotiabank had entered into a deferred prosecution agreement and would pay $127.4 million in fines and forfeiture.
Regulators said Scotiabank had admitted to its role in a scheme by which four bank traders engaged in manipulative trading in the gold, silver, platinum and palladium futures contracts markets on the New York Mercantile Exchange Inc. and Commodity Exchange Inc.
Pro-Life
6 년 전
Palladium Tops $1,400 First Time Ever On ‘Avaricious’ Demand
Allen Sykora Thursday January 17, 2019 11:28
https://www.kitco.com/news/2019-01-17/Palladium-Tops-1-400-First-Time-Ever-On-Avaricious-Demand.html
(Kitco News) - Palladium – described as a tight market for some time now due to robust automotive demand – topped $1,400 an ounce for the first time ever on Thursday.
A desk trader in the physical market said that at one point, palladium suddenly rocketed ahead by around $80 in three hours. Another dealer said prices then eased on profit-taking, but he looks for another test of $1,400.
Spot palladium was $32.75 higher to $1,389.55 an ounce as of 11:11 a.m. EST. The metal peaked just above $1,431 overnight. This was $136 higher than the session peak in spot gold.
“Supplies [of palladium] are pretty much what they were, but demand has been avaricious over the past year,” said Bill O’Neill, one of the principals with LOGIC Advisors, in an interview with Kitco News. “As a result, we have soaring palladium prices and a premium to gold.”
TD Securities issued a research note saying palladium “is in a class of its own” right now. The sharp gains come on a day when the other precious metals – gold, silver and platinum – are all steady to modestly softer.
“The metal, which is primarily used in auto catalysts, appears to be immune from changes in risk appetite as its structural deficit continues to power a surge in pricing — despite crumbling auto sales and concerns about a global growth slowdown which have otherwise caused sharp corrections across global markets,” TDS added.
Afshin Nabavi, head of trading at trading house MKS (Switzerland) SA, pointed out that the palladium market is still in backwardation. For any commodity, this is when nearby contracts are more expensive than deferred. This is seen as a sign of tight supplies since buyers are willing to pay a premium to get the commodity right away.
“There is good demand for the physical and lack of availability for supply,” Nabavi told Kitco News. “It’s been going on for a while now.”
The London-based consultancy Metals Focus estimated that the 2018 global palladium supply-demand deficit was 1.1 million ounces. This means that the world’s above-ground stocks are being whittled down to meet demand, analysts explained. The big demand has come from auto manufacturers due to the use of the metal in catalytic converters. The industry’s use for palladium rose to 8.5 million ounces last year, up 47% from 5.8 million in 2010, according to Metals Focus’ data.
George Gero, managing director with RBC Wealth Management, also cited strong demand from the auto industry, but added that some palladium is also used in the energy industry. Much of the metal right now is in the form of a sponge, a powdery substance use for industrial purposes.
“You’ve got a bit of a shortage in deliverable bars,” Gero said.
Buy stops were triggered early Thursday, accelerating the price ascent sharply in thin trading conditions, Nabavi reported. Stops are pre-placed orders activated when certain chart points are hit.
“Overall, it feels like we may be in for another test of $1,400,” Nabavi added.
Analysts with the Hightower Report said palladium “continues to defy gravity” and could become an investment “fad” since it now has a premium to gold. “In other words, it is possible that palladium’s own momentum will result in even more gains directly ahead,” they said.
Commerzbank analysts commented that palladium investors appear to be ignoring some of the weaker sales figures in all of the major auto markets lately.
“Instead, they are seeing news such as the planned widening of a strike to include the platinum mines of a major South African gold and platinum producer as being a good reason to buy,” they said. The country is also a major palladium producer due to mining of the metal as a by-product in platinum mines.
BMO analysts said some of the recent strength in palladium has been driven by yet another supply concern – the U.S. Congress “pushing back on efforts to ease sanctions on Russia.” Concerns about palladium supplies from Russia sometimes develop during U.S.-Russia disputes since Russia is a major palladium producer and investors worry that these issues could restrict the flow of metal.
O’Neill said a key question for the market may be whether palladium prices have soared so much that auto manufacturers will start substituting more less-expensive platinum into catalysts. Because car sales have shown some signs of sluggishness, manufacturers may not have been as aggressive in shifting metals as might otherwise be the case, he added.
“Now we’re reaching levels where they may change,” O’Neill said. “But it will take another year before they can change everything over. There will be a point where palladium tops out, but it doesn’t look like it’s in the near term.”
In a research note earlier this week, Metals Focus said there is potential for a profit-taking pullback in the near term after the sharp run-up in palladium prices. But the consultancy firm otherwise remained upbeat on palladium.
“Indeed, we believe that this trend will continue into 2020 and beyond, as persistent deficits push the palladium price through new record highs,” Metals Focus said.
By Allen Sykora
For Kitco News
Pro-Life
10 년 전
Bill Gates Sponsoring Palladium-Based LENR Technology
Tuesday December 23, 2014 14:20
http://www.kitco.com/ind/Albrecht/2014-12-23-Bill-Gates-Sponsoring-Palladium-Based-LENR-Technology.html
Low energy nuclear reactor (LENR) technology, and by extension palladium, is attracting the attention of one of the richest men in the world and a pioneer inventor of new technology.
LENR is science’s new approach to the 1990s’ concept of “cold fusion,” which failed spectacularly. However, by learning from previous mistakes, and by applying newly developed nano-technology, scientists around the world have since worked on ways of making LENR work.
In a recent visit to Italy, billionaire business man, investor and inventor Bill Gates said that for several years he has been a believer in the idea of LENR, and is a sponsor of companies developing the technology. Gates is not only the Chairman of TerraPower, a company developing a “new class of nuclear reactors using innovative core physics.” He is also a member of the American Energy Innovation Council and supporter of new technologies through the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, which he founded in 2000.
In June of this year, he wrote a blog titled “We need Energy Miracles” to stress the importance of new technologies like LENR.
Tech Metals Insider previously reported on the technology, its “side effects” of creating precious metals, and its application by Mitsubishi Heavy Industries of Japan.
During his trip to Italy he visited the national agency for new technologies, energy and sustainable economic development (ENEA) where scientists have made significant progress towards a working design for low energy nuclear fusion. The centerpiece of their design is the same as in Mitsubishi’s: palladium.
Creating palladium foil with just the right parameters, and managing stress levels in the material was a key issue, one that the researchers at EMEA were able to resolve several years ago.
Nuclear Energy Times describes the state of LENR development as “laboratory experiments which have the potential to produce nuclear-scale energy and nuclear products but without the harmful effects of conventional nuclear energy.”
A palladium miracle in the making? It will take a while to find out, but LENR certainly has the attention of serious scientists and investors today who believe in its future.
Pro-Life
11 년 전
Today on Kitco… BMO: Auto Sales Support Top Metals Pick Palladium
Wednesday December 11, 2013 9:34 AM
BMO Capital Markets says palladium its top pick in the metals sector, with support coming from growth in auto sales. The firm cites data showing that Chinese passenger vehicle sales in November were at 16.9 million units on an annualized basis, up 16% year-on-year. U.S. sales were an annualized 15.2 million, up 9% year-on-year, while Europe was largely flat. BMO expects auto production growth in China and the U.S. "to outpace industrial production in general for the next year or two at least, supporting palladium demand relative to other metals.” These two countries, whose auto markets mainly consist of gasoline-powered cars, tend to rely upon palladium for catalytic-converter systems, whereas Europe and its larger diesel-powered market is more exposed to platinum. On the supply side, BMO says production growth in South Africa is “somewhat offset” by expectations for a decline in both Russian production and stockpile draws. BMO anticipates “a deficit market for palladium for many years, which should support prices.”
By Allen Sykora of Kitco News; asykora@kitco.com
http://www.kitco.com/news/2013-12-11/KitcoNewsMarketNuggets-December-11.html