Originally published at Notes from the bunker…. You can comment here or there.
Most of us don’t buy gold and silver as an investment (in the traditional sense) but rather as a hedge against inflation or currency devaluation. However, the lesson learned from these folks who invested is the same – if you buy precious metals but don’t actually have physical possession of them, well, you bought something but I don’t know what.
Investors are furious that they can’t get back the gold and silver they stashed with the failed brokerage.
It’s one thing for $1.2 billion to vanish into thin air through a series of complex trades, the well-publicized phenomenon at bankrupt MF Global. It’s something else for a bar of silver stashed in a vault to instantly shrink in size by more than 25%.
That, in essence, is what’s happening to investors whose bars of silver and gold were held through accounts with MF Global.
The trustee overseeing the liquidation of the failed brokerage has proposed dumping all remaining customer assets—gold, silver, cash, options, futures and commodities—into a single pool that would pay customers only 72% of the value of their holdings. In other words, while traders already may have paid the full price for delivery of specific bars of gold or silver—and hold “warehouse receipts” to prove it—they’ll have to forfeit 28% of the value.