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India Beats China to Walk Away With 200 Tonnes of IMF Gold

By Dan Denning • November 4th, 2009 • Related Articles • Filed Under

About the Author

DanDan Denning is the author of 2005's best-selling The Bull Hunter (John Wiley & Sons). He began his financial publishing career in 1997 and has covered financial markets form Baltimore, Paris, London and, beginning in 2005 Melbourne. He’s the editor of The Daily Reckoning Australia and the Publisher of Port Phillip Publishing.

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Filed Under: Market • Precious Metals
Tags: adrian ash • balance sheet • Bullion Vault • central bank • china • European Central Bank • Gold • gold price • gold supply • imf • india • London Bullion Market Association • reserve asset • tonnes
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Well how about that! India pipped China at the post to walk away with 200 tonnes of IMF gold. Granted, India had to pay US$6.8 billion for the yellow metal. But with China steadily accumulating gold as a reserve asset (at the household AND central bank level), everyone thought China has this one in the bag. Not so!

Something more than meets the eye is going on here. The IMF sale was part of a plan to unload 403.3 tonnes of gold. It's halfway there, and will use the proceeds to fund itself and loans to the developing world (or perhaps Britain and America when they go broke). But what else is going on?

In the past, larges sales of gold - mostly by European central banks - swamped the gold price and kept it in check. The European CBs either felt like they had too much gold doing too little work on the balance sheet. Or, they were manipulating the price of gold down by increasing the supply to the market whenever the gold price began rendering its verdict on global fiscal and monetary policy.

India's central bank is now the proud owner of 557 tonnes of gold. That gives it the tenth largest gold holdings among central banks. But it probably isn't finished. Gold makes up just six percent of India's foreign exchange reserves. There's plenty of room for that to grow.

But don't forget China. China has $2.3 trillion in foreign exchange reserves. But 70% of those - or $1.6 trillion - are in U.S. dollars. It owns over just a 1,000 tonnes of gold. That makes up less than 2% of China's reserves and makes China the seventh largest holder of above ground gold. In fact the gold exchange traded fund (NYSE:GLD) owns more gold than China. France, Italy, the IMF, Germany, and the United States round out top five (from fifth to first).

What this tells you is that China could double (and then double again) its gold reserves and gold would still make up less than 10% of its total forex reserves. Compare that to 66% in Italy, 69% in Germany, 70% in France, and 77% in the U.S., according to official numbers. So what's the big deal?

There will always be a threat that European Central Banks release gold supply on to the market. In fact, European central banks just renewed a five-year agreement (including the IMF) to sell down a maximum of 400 tonnes of gold per year from their holdings. They've agreed to this to disgorge their gold in an orderly fashion.

But it would not surprise us to see the Europeans fail to sell the gold they're allowed to sell under the agreement. Our old desk mate in London, Adrian Ash (now with Bullion Vault) is at the London Bullion Market Association's annual meeting in Edinburgh. Word from UBS analyst John Reade, also at the meeting, is that European Central Bank official Paul Mercier reckons that official holders of gold will, "no longer be net sellers of gold."

As we predicted earlier this year, the European central banks would rather hoard their gold than sell it in a rising market. There may be a price at which they do sell it, in order to pay down sovereign debts. But psychologically, the fact that central banks want to own gold and not sell it is pretty important.

Also, it shows you how the balance of economic power in the world has shifted East. True, the European banks can still dump gold on to the market to drown the price. But between the ETFs, central bank buyers in India and China, and the average man on the street in Beijing, Mumbai, and elsewhere, there are more buyers of gold now than sellers.

And if we were right yesterday that the GFC is slowly morphing into a sovereign debt crisis, then the case for gold is that much stronger. This explains why gold futures were up by nearly 3% overnight and old yeller hit a new high at US$1,084.90.

The only worry? So many hedge fund managers and pundits are singing the same tune: long gold and short U.S. Treasuries. As we mentioned yesterday, the bond bubble could go on much longer than anyone expects. And when so many people agree on something, none of them are usually right. As a contrarian, you'd be worried about becoming a victim right about now.

But yes, in the long term, the end of the Super Cycle in fiat money results in the remonetisation of gold. That is what you're seeing now. And it's probably what you'll see for a few more years. It also ought to benefit other precious metals, and of course, precious metals shares.

Dan Denning
for The Daily Reckoning Australia

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Related Articles:

  • IMF Deems Gold An Idle Asset
  • Gold: The Ultimate Unlevered Hard Asset
  • Even Central Banks Buy Gold
  • The Saudi Arabia of Coal
  • IMF Gold to be Used

About the Author

DanDan Denning is the author of 2005's best-selling The Bull Hunter (John Wiley & Sons). He began his financial publishing career in 1997 and has covered financial markets form Baltimore, Paris, London and, beginning in 2005 Melbourne. He’s the editor of The Daily Reckoning Australia and the Publisher of Port Phillip Publishing.

See All Posts by This Author

There Are 5 Responses So Far. »

  1. Comment by Dan on 4 November 2009:

    A very big hmmm. I have read widely looking for a reasonable explanation for this and why the IMF (definitely not innocent in this GFC) doesn't consider gold to be valuable enough to hang on to. So far I haven't found anything believable. Makes me suspicious.

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  2. Comment by Papa Stanley on 5 November 2009:

    Dan, I think it's more the case that the IMF needs more cash to fund their activities, as opposed to the idea that it "doesn't consider gold to be valuable enough to hang on to".

    As I understand it from what I've read in the past (DR and others) they've not had the same kind of income as they used to (making money by bailing out national economies, requiring restructured economic policies, then being repaid over time with interest as the borrower's economy repairs), and their activities and scope of responsibility is increasing (ie increasing costs).

    In short? diminishing earnings - increasing costs = asset sales.

    From Macro to micro - I wouldn't want to sell my gold, but would if I had to for a sufficiently urgent reason - as above, so below ;-)

    Cheers

    Papa

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  3. Comment by wasabu on 5 November 2009:

    That's right Papa! The IMF, the world's shady Aid Dealer was used to pimping third world economies and dismantling their economic dignity, creating generations of slaves by proxy.

    Ofcourse, they're really an arm of the US Govt and will go down with that particular vessel. The world has had enough of seedy operators.

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  4. Comment by First Home Buyer on 5 November 2009:

    Thoughts:

    US is using IMF to enrich India as a proxy against ___?____ as a counterbalance to maintain Might in the region.

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  5. Comment by Dan on 5 November 2009:

    FHB .. there could be something in that. Definitely worth following that lead.

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