Anonymous ID: 7cc34e Jan. 30, 2021, 11:51 a.m. No.12769208   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9394 >>9639

How the Hunt Brothers cornered the Silver Market

 

Nelson Bunker Hunt and William Herbert Hunt — oil company executives, investors and brothers — first began purchasing Silver in the early 1970s at a price of less than $2 per ounce. The Hunt brothers’ fervor for Silver accelerated dramatically following the death of their father in 1974, a Texas oil tycoon known as H.L. Hunt. His passing released a $5 billion fortune to members of the Hunt family.

 

Fueled by an enormous amount of capital, the Hunt brothers continued stockpiling Silver and purchasing Silver futures contracts. By early 1979, the price of Silver had risen to about $6 per ounce. The Hunt brothers acquired roughly 195 million ounces of Silver, about a third of the world’s total supply. They facilitated their Silver purchases in part by investing in futures contracts through several brokers, including Bache Halsey Stuart Shields, Prudential-Bache Securities and Prudential Securities. By December 1979, the market price for Silver fluctuated between $20 and $25 per ounce.

 

Silver had become exorbitantly expensive even for practical uses. Doctors struggled to afford X-ray film for patients, families melted down their heirloom Silver flatware, Silver burglaries skyrocketed and Tiffany’s & Co. was forced to drastically raise its jewelry prices. Tiffany’s even took out a full page ad in the New York Times criticizing the Hunt brothers, writing, "We think it is unconscionable for anyone to hoard several billion, yes billion, dollars' worth of Silver and thus drive the price up so high that others must pay artificially high prices for articles made of Silver.”

 

Silver reached a record high of $48.70 per ounce on Jan. 18, 1980. By some estimates, the Hunt brothers’ entire Silver fortune peaked at a value of $10 billion.

THURSDAY, MARCH 27, 1980

 

Facing out-of-control Silver prices, COMEX (Commodity Exchange, Inc.), a division of the New York Mercantile Exchange (NYMEX), acted against the Hunt brothers. On Jan. 7, 1980, COMEX introduced Silver Rule 7, which placed heavy restrictions on the purchase of commodities on the margin.

 

Following its peak price of $48.70 per ounce, Silver began its decline and the Hunt family’s Silver fortune began to shrink.

 

On March 27, 1980, known as Silver Thursday, the price of Silver dropped 50% in a single day, from $21.62 to $10.80 per ounce. The Hunt brothers failed to meet several margin calls and about $7 billion in paper assets suddenly turned into a $1.7 billion debt.

 

The sudden price drop threatened to collapse several investment firms and banks. To prevent widespread financial chaos, multiple banks joined together to issue the Hunt brothers a $1.1 billion line of credit.

SILVER MANIPULATION AFTERMATH

 

Several years of criminal investigations, hearings before Congress and civil cases followed the Hunt brothers’ Silver manipulation scheme.

 

In August 1988, a federal grand jury ordered Nelson Bunker Hunt, William Herbert Hunt and a third brother, Lamar Hunt, to pay more than $130 million in damages for conspiring to corner the world's Silver market and for ruining the investments of Minpeco, a mineral marketing company of the Peruvian government. By September 1988, both Nelson Bunker Hunt and William Herbert Hunt had filed for personal bankruptcy protection to avoid having to post a $225 million bond required for appealing a federal jury verdict against them. In December 1989, the Hunt brothers reached a settlement with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission. They were each ordered to pay fines of $10 million and were banned from trading in American commodity markets.

 

Members of the Hunt family suffered a huge loss of credibility following the Silver manipulation scheme. Nelson Bunker Hunt eventually sold most of his assets. He died in 2014 under relatively modest circumstances. William Herbert Hunt, however, eventually recovered much of his fortune in the oil industry. As of 2019, Forbes estimates his net worth at about $2.6 billion.

https://www.apmex.com/education/history/silver-thursday-how-the-hunt-brothers-cornered-silver

 

The fatal flaw in this was the overuse of Futures contracts as the CFTC just raised the maintenance requirements higher-meaning the Hunts had to pony up the cash to continue to hold those positions.

 

They knew what they were doing and got BTFO so anyone who thinks attacking this part of the market is going to be easy is dreaming.