Gold traded above $336 early in the US, Friday December 13, 2002, when, of course, the Blue Coat Cavalry rode in on their shiny horses. Blam! - Slam! - Wham! was the sound of their selling. Selling that seeks to move volume is real selling that never announces its presence. This Blam-Slam-Wham type of selling has only one purpose. That purpose is to sell the least amount of gold with the most negative price impact on the gold market. We spoke about the difference between manipulation and stabilization being perception. This is written from the perception of a long.
The Gold Community, of course, chokes at the sight of the Blue Coats coming. Away the gold community runs like the Knights of Ni in the Monty Python movie, "Monty Python & the Holy Grail." Run Away - Run Away" is the cry of "Our Crowd." "Sell-Sell!" is their lament and they are chased back toward $330 by the smallest amount of gold being sold to make the biggest impact on the community that cries "Foul-Foul-Foul," yet does absolutely nothing about it, with the exception of the Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee (GATA).
GATA has mobilized the gold community-at-large for one of the most serious offensives in the history of gold. With their BIS/Fed suit, they took on the establishment elite in an effort to make the fact of bullying gold known to the public. What do they receive for their efforts? - The mainline press has ignored it, and from within the gold community a competing metals/mining site gleefully calls them, "Trailer Trash."
Buying of gold shares or options or futures does nothing for gold bullion or the gold price. Buying of gold coins does very little other than re-circulate the storehouse of already-minted gold coins. Writing about gold informs, but does little for the gold price. Complaining about the bulling presence in the gold market on almost a daily basis does as much as screaming at the dark, because it lacks action.
Now that gold has broken out above $330 and attained the first price objective of a touch of $338, it is time for you to consider dealing in the real stuff. It is quite simple, but falls primarily to those who can afford it, but the cost is not large.
Every gold trader who has invested in the gold market should consider helping gold by considering dealing in the real stuff and not paper substitutes.
I therefore propose the following individual action. Those in the International and US Gold Investment Community, who are financially able, would purchase one COMEX gold contract and take delivery of that contract. By taking delivery of the actual bullion gold in an individual, orderly, constant and therefore non-distruptive manner the COMEX will be transformed. Over time, this individual, orderly, non-distruptive action upon the Comex gold futures market will accomplish several goals.
For those who believe in gold's discipline and have invested in it or gold-related investments, based on your individual decision buy 1 Comex gold contract and take delivery. You then have done something very important for gold because you are buying gold bullion and not simply playing a paper game called gold that settles in cash. One COMEX gold future contract represents 100 ounces of gold and is valued presently at US $33,650 at delivery.
Are you willing to do something for gold bullion that really counts or just carp about being run ragged by the bullies?
If you do not do something for gold, you have no right at all to expect gold to do something for you.
The Commodities Exchange (COMEX), a division of the New York Mercantile Exchange (NYMEX), provides a forum for the trading of gold futures and options (as opposed to the "traditional" means of investing in gold, such as bullion, coins, and mining stocks). In addition to trading futures ("contracts with firm commitments to make or accept delivery of a specified quantity and quality of a commodity during a specific month in the future at a price agreed upon at the time the commitment is made"), investors can actually take possession or "delivery" of their gold futures contracts if they wish. It is rare that a trader ever takes possession of the physical commodity he/she trades, but not impossible. Presently, less than 1% of all gold futures contract trades result in delivery.
Taking delivery of gold is also referred to as "exchange of futures for, on in connection with, physicals" or EFP. Deliveries of gold bullion against futures contracts traded on COMEX are available to an investor during any business day within the month specified in the contract. The first day a seller can give delivery notice to the buyer is the next to the last business day of the month prior to a maturing delivery month. The last day a seller can give delivery notice is the second to the last business day of a maturing delivery month (the day after the last trading day). The last trading day is the third to the last business day of a maturing delivery month. So, if an investor buys a December 2002 gold contract, the first notice day would be November 27, 2002.
Any gold delivered against a futures contract must bear a serial number and identifying stamp of a refiner approved and listed by the Exchange. Delivery must be made from a depository located in the Borough of Manhattan, New York City, licensed by the Exchange (listed below or See Appendix)
Check List to take delivery of gold futures contracts:

* The domestic shipping maximum quote of delivery is .27¢ - delivery charges are estimates based on the Brink's quote that the more gold shipped, the less the cost per ounce.
- Armored car costs = $ per ounce plus $20 for security
- Warehouse costs = $15 per bar
- Not including additional insurance
- Assume gold costs $326
For international delivery, there are a few more steps.According to Brinks, the shipping company will need specific mailing and packing information for each shipment:
- How much it weighs (by kilos for international shipments)?
- How it is packaged? The gold bars must be packed correctly for shipping. Either the Depository or the shipper can do. Typically, the Depository delivers gold on a palette. It must then be transferred into pails (which fit 8 bars) or into tubs (which fit 160 bars) for international shipping. The shipper must be able to see and count all bars. Brinks will transfer the gold on the palette to their Brooklyn vault and then package it themselves.
The base rate for international shipping 100,000 ounces would be .12 ¼ ¢ per ounce (approximately $12,250, or .04% of the total cost - quoted by Brinks). This includes the charges for pick up, packing the bullion (by Brinks), the air freight rate flight, having the shipment met by a local branch representative, customs entry, and a $25 airport security. All other fees, such as duties and all other customs are not included in price estimate. The shipment must be from a bank to a bank; they will not pick up at a residence. Brinks will deliver to England, France, Germany, Switzerland, India, Hong Kong, Australia, Russia, etc.
To ship one 100-ounce bar, Federal Express will ship precious metals. The cost to ship a 7-lb. package (one 100-ounce bar of gold) from New York to Zurich would be $100. There are no duties or taxes to pay for delivery gold to Switzerland. The bottom line estimate for delivering one 100-ounce bar of gold from New York to Zurich will be around $100.
An important note: any gold that is signed out of a COMEX depository and shipped internationally must be assayed before it is brought back to the COMEX for resale, at a cost ($138 per bar - the cost descends as the volume increases).
COMEX Depositories:
Brink's, Inc.
580 Fifth Avenue, Suite 400
New York, New York 10036
USA
phone: 212-558-6267HSBC Bank USA
1 West 39th Street, SC 2 Level
New York, New York 10018
USA
phone: 212-525-5000Scotia/Mocatta Depository, (Scotia/Mocatta is the global bullion banking division of the Bank of Nova Scotia, formed in 1997 by the bank's acquisition of Mocatta Bullion from Standard Chartered Bank in London.)
26 Broadway
New York, New York 10004
USA
phone: 212-912-8530Resources
http://209.67.30.245/jsp/markets/gol_pre_agree.jsp
http://www.chdwk.com/gold.cfm
http://www.toerien.com/advice_column/securities/gold_futures.htm
Brink's (http://www.brinksinc.com/)To contact the author:
James Sinclair
Chairman of the Board
TAN RANGE EXPLORATION
www.tanrange.com
www.Tnxinvestor@zoolink.com18 December 2002