Here's a prediction for you: everyone's looking for the "next Enron". Well, there's some evidence (I quote below) to suggest that the next major shock to the markets will come from a financial institution, possible JPM. I'm not not clear on the details, but apparently there is significant risk of financial collapse due to very risky gold-linked derivatives. My information comes from Thom Calandra of CBS Marketwatch. Here are a few excerpts from today's article by TC:
"Bill Murphy, a gold advocate, has long warned his subscribers about the dangers of a massive bank default tied to tricky interest-rate and bullion derivatives. J.P. Morgan Chase is the largest issuer of gold-linked derivatives in this country. The contracts are designed to help gold companies, central banks and others manage -- and some say mismanage -- the market for gold."
"Not only do the banks have potentially huge gold derivative problems, but that could set off an interest-rate derivative problem," Murphy said Friday. "Morgan has something like $23 trillion in derivative positions on their books, according to the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency. "It is the norm to account for 2 percent of those derivatives to be at risk. That is a mighty big number."
"Derivatives are financial instruments such as options, futures, interest rate swaps and variable-price contracts. Murphy says the suffering stocks of J.P. Morgan, Goldman Sachs, Lehman and others are already reflecting a coming nightmare in the banking world. "A credit downgrade will increase their costs and make it harder and harder for certain bullion banks to carry their enormous gold short-sale positions," he says. "It will invoke credit committee crackdowns."
"Murphy, who sees the $315 level for spot gold prices as a line in the sand for the investment banks, says counter-party derivative problems "could set off a daisy chain of severe financial problems, or defaults. That is what happened in the energy industry when Enron went bust."
What's this mean for a trader? Well, if Calandra's sources are correct, then the consequences of a credit downgrade at any of the major banks could have a far-reaching ripple effect (nothing spooks Wall Street more than the fear of instability in our money supply), and send stock prices into a meltdown that would exceed the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks. One advance warning of such an event, according to this scenario, would be a sharp rise in the price of gold above $315. Keep your eyes peeled, amigos.