The
Casey Files
About Those Proposed IMF
Gold Sales
A Daily Resource Special
Report
by Doug Hornig
The
International Speculator
Feb 12, 2007
As you have probably heard
by now, a blue-ribbon panel recently advised the IMF to sell
gold as a way of trying to clean up its finances.
The news initially spooked
some weaker holders and hedge fund managers, most of whom are
clueless about the overarching trends driving gold. However,
as Doug Hornig makes clear in the following report, the proposed
IMF sales represent much ado about nothing... other than perhaps
creating a buying opportunity, that is.
-Doug Casey
The
International Speculator
Lately the metals markets have
been abuzz with speculation about the meaning, and implications,
of proposed gold sales by the International Monetary Fund (IMF).
It's a subject about which many of our readers are probably concerned,
so we decided to take a look.
This potential development
came about because the IMF finds itself on shaky financial ground.
It is facing a shortfall of about $105 million this fiscal year
(ending April 30, 2007), a deficit which is projected to balloon
to $185 million in 2008 and $244 million by '09.
There are any number of reasons
advanced for this deteriorating balance sheet, the most common
one being that many formerly cash-strapped Third World countries
are experiencing enough prosperity to make early repayment of
loans - Indonesia, Serbia, Uruguay and Ecuador are among those
doing so this year - thereby cutting down on the interest income
the IMF relies upon to cover operating expenses.
Though that may be a central
part of the problem, the IMF should take a long look at its own
bloat as well. In the past ten years, its annual budget has doubled
to nearly $1 billion. As Devesh Kapur, an economist at the University
of Pennsylvania, puts it, "Costs at the fund have been allowed
to get out of control. It now has a bigger staff and budget than
its role justifies."
Be that as it may, IMF officials
determined that sources of revenue other than lending income
needed to be developed. And thus the Committee to Study Sustainable
Long-Term Financing was convened last May by IMF Chief Rodrigo
Rato. Also known as the Crockett Committee - after Chairman Andrew
Crockett, former director of the Bank for International Settlements
and now President of JPMorgan Chase - it consisted of a small
group of eight "eminent persons," namely: Crockett;
former Fed Chair Alan Greenspan; Mohamed el-Erian, CEO of Harvard
Management Co.; Tito Mboweni, governor of the South African Reserve
Bank; Guillermo Ortiz, governor of the Bank of Mexico; Hamad
al-Sayari, governor of the Saudi Monetary Agency; Jean-Claude
Trichet, president of the European Central Bank; and Zhou Xiaochuan,
governor of the People's Bank of China. The committee released
its report on January 31 of this year.
During the press briefing that
followed, Crockett said that the committee favored the "creation
of an endowment - were it to be possible - that would provide
income that could be relied upon over a period of time without
having to ask members."
The "more attractive source"
for this "is to use the fund's resources of gold, and so
the report does suggest that it would be appropriate and possible
to [...] sell a part of the fund's gold holdings, and to devote
the resources obtained from that to the creation of an endowment."
The sale could be as much as
400 metric tons (12.9 million ounces), which, valuing the metal
at a conservative $500/ounce (the past two years' average), would
net the IMF a minimum of $6.6 billion. That amount, invested,
would be expected to generate $195 million in annual income.
Of course, if current prices hold for the duration of the sales
period, those numbers would be substantially higher.
Crockett noted that the 400-ton
figure corresponds to IMF gold that was sold and repurchased
in an off-market transaction about 6 years ago. It is about 12.5%
of the Fund's total holdings.
The Committee, whose recommendations
have been referred to the IMF's executive committee for debate,
took care to emphasize that the proposed sales should be "ring-fenced
[...] to limit their market impacts." (Longtime Fed watchers
chuckled at the wording, noting that such phrases are a dead
giveaway of Greenspan participation.) To this end, Crockett promised
the following safeguards:
"In the first instance,
the amount should be limited to the 400 tonnes I mentioned without
envisaging any additional sales.
"Secondly, the sales should
take place within the existing Central Bank Gold Agreement [CBGA],
that is to say it would not be additional to sales already programmed
by central banks, but would be accommodated by reductions in
the amounts of gold that central banks might sell under the [CBGA].
"And thirdly, we have
emphasized that the sale should be undertaken in a very careful
way in terms of their periodicity amounts and manner of sale
such as not to disturb the market."
The CBGA limits signatory central
banks (all of the major ones, excluding only the U.S.) to sales
of 500 tons/year. In 2006, however, the banks released only about
350 tons. Thus, the IMF committee appears to be saying that it
proposes taking up whatever slack exists this year, while not
allowing its sales to push the amount of new gold coming to market
over the pre-set 500-ton limit.
It is important to remember
a couple of things here.
First, it's not the IMF's gold.
The metal belongs to the depositor nations, the largest of which
is the U.S. We the taxpayers own that gold, and thus have a very
real interest in what happens to it.
Second, the IMF is prohibited
from trading in gold. Its bylaws state that it does not "have
the authority to buy gold," nor may it "engage in any
other gold transactions - such as loans, leases, swaps, or use
of gold as collateral."
What it can do is "accept
gold in the discharge of a member's obligations" and "sell
gold outright," but the latter requires "an 85% majority
of total voting power." Since the U.S. controls about 17%
of voting power, it can't by itself make a deal happen. But it
has the absolute authority to block one.
The Crockett Committee report
is not the first time the notion of IMF gold sales has been floated.
It's an idea that has cropped up repeatedly in the past but has
always failed, either because of American opposition or because
of opposition among the more general membership, which includes
many gold-producing nations that have an interest in keeping
a floor under prices.
What will be the U.S. position
this time around? We'll have to wait and see, but if the past
is prologue, there will be stiff opposition. The final decision
on whether to veto or not rests with Congress, where Democrats
in the past have fought IMF gold sales on the grounds that they
would hurt impoverished nations. Sen. Harry Reid voted against
them as minority whip, and might be expected to be consistent
now that he's majority leader. Or perhaps not, depending on which
way present political winds are blowing.
While the IMF's announced motive
seems to make fiscal sense - provided one accepts that it has
any need to be as big and meddlesome as it is - gold bugs immediately
began looking for the story behind the story.
If the Gold Anti-Trust Action
Committee (GATA) is correct in their contention that the American
government has acted deliberately, in concert with the major
central banks, to suppress the price of gold in order to mask
the dollar's inherent weakness (an effort in which Mr. Greenspan
is alleged to have been a willing participant), then the IMF
proposal plays right into such a conspiracy. Its hidden meaning
could be that the IMF must help out with gold sales, because
the CBGA signatories have become reluctant to part with enough
of their reserves to keep a lid on prices and, in fact, may be
pleased with the appreciation of their assets. Yearly sales boosted
to the full 500 tons, thanks to IMF participation, should contribute
to further price suppression. It'd be no great shocker if the
IMF were doing the U.S.' bidding.
In addition, it's possible
that some depositors, holding dollars and nervous about their
decline, are making noise about getting their gold back. Propping
up the buck through gold sales could be viewed as an aid to easing
their fears.
Then there's the China factor.
Analyst Michael Kosares, writing on USAgold.com, says
that, "There is no doubt in my mind that China would like
to see the IMF sell all its 3,217 tonnes of gold, particularly
if China might become a primary recipient. Without any fanfare
China would happily write the check for all 3,217 tonnes. Otherwise,
I can't imagine why the Chinese central bank might have been
included on this IMF committee, unless it was to demonstrate
that the system is at least trying to get them some gold."
Whatever the case, our readers
are apt to be most interested in what happens next. Not an easy
call, given that neither the IMF nor the international gold trade
are particularly transparent.
Many analysts, though, feel
that the proposal will never fly. For example, Julian Phillips
of GoldForecaster.com writes: "Should the member
nations of the IMF find themselves in disagreement with a decision
of the IMF to sell their gold, the possibility of this gold being
returned to them is there. But should this option be used, the
damage to the IMF of such a position [a minority objecting to
the majority] would produce disunity in the global monetary system,
which could prove extremely disruptive. [I] expect that the mere
possibility of such a disruption, of itself, would persuade the
majority not to sell any gold, but at best to revalue it."
Even if a sale does come about,
will it matter?
Many feel that the IMF's actions
are not liable to have much impact on gold, arguing that the
distortions of the CBGA, even at maximum 500-ton strength, have
already been fully factored into the current price and its trend
line.
This is not to say that there
couldn't be a short-term downdraught. Sure there could be, especially
as the IMF sales are formally announced. Some holders of gold,
maybe a significant number, can be expected to sell into the
news.
But with countries such as
China, Russia and the nations of the Middle East itching to add
to their reserves, even a large dump of physical metal onto the
market is certain to be absorbed in short order.
Nor will countries be the only
buyers. Beverly Hills investments manager Kenneth Gerbino wrote
in 2005 about a similar IMF sales speculation, saying that any
additional supply "would surely be snapped up by the bullion
banks and mining companies that are 'short' somewhere between
10,000 and 12,000 tonnes, according to some very savvy analysts."
There's no reason to think that's changed much in the interim.
Gerbino could have been writing
about the IMF when he concluded, "Central bankers will most
likely continue, as usual, to scare the price of gold down from
time to time by statements of gold sales. But they are all too
keenly aware of the growing number of people who realize that
the gold, not paper and ink, is the real stable monetary element."
Finally, it is important to
keep the relatively miniscule amount of gold sales we are talking
about in perspective. In an era where over $1 trillion in derivatives
trade globally each day, $6.6 billion in sales is just not that
much money when compared to potential investor demand once the
U.S. dollar goes into the free fall that Doug Casey, among others,
now believe is imminent.
In other words, if IMF sales
do happen, and if they depress gold's price, that's a buying
opportunity... for bullion and especially for the high-quality
junior exploration stocks that pack the most punch in a rising
gold market.
[One of the easiest ways to accumulate
a nest egg for rougher times is to invest in precious metals
- physical gold and silver. You don't want to be unprepared when
the walls come crashing down around you. To learn what you can
do to survive financially and turn a major crisis to your advantage,
click
here.]
Feb 9, 2007
-Doug Hornig
Doug Hornig is a senior editor
for Casey Research, publishers of Doug Casey's International
Speculator... for over 27 years providing investors with
unbiased and carefully researched recommendations for high-quality
gold and other natural resource stocks with the very real opportunity
for a 100% or better gain within a 12-month horizon. Hornig also
writes the Daily Resource, a daily column that appears on the
KitcoCasey and CaseyResearch.com web sites.
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