Gold Forecaster
- Global Watch
Central Bank Gold Sales
to End Prematurely?
Julian D.W.
Phillips
Gold Forecaster snippet
May 7, 2007
- Below is a snippet from the
latest weekly issue from www.GoldForecaster.com
In the last couple of months
a great deal of emphasis has been placed on Central Bank sales.
These have been heavy and along with diminished E.T.F. purchases
and even net sales, have held the gold price back. But a major
point has been overlooked in these commentaries. How long can
they last?
The amount of sales per year
is not the sole limitation on these sales, but the announced
total sales by each individual Central Bank is the defined
limit. Our Table below highlights the situation entirely.
Central Bank
Gold Agreement - Sales in 2006
Notes to table: -
a
1) This now includes
the unannounced sales for both years from Spain
& Belgium, which totaled 177.1 tonnes for the two years.
a
2) We have excluded
the unannounced sales from the totals so as to retain accurate
levels of decline in announced sales.
a
3) Germany's sales
were for coins, which we do not regard as part of the announced
sales for the purposes of this situation.
This table has as its second
column the sales that each Central Bank signatory to the Central
Bank Gold Agreement announced it would sell. We are presently
in the third year of this Agreement. The Agreement also includes
a 'ceiling' of 500 tonnes per annum. The year commences on
27th September each year.
As you can see the Agreement
has been kept. So far less than 500 tonnes of gold has been
sold each of these years, with the total of last year's sales
less than 400 tonnes. In this, the third year, we still have
another 5 months to run beofre the year is finished, leaving
two more years thereafter until the Agreement runs out.
The tonnage remaining of the
announced sales is down to 617.5 tonnes, as of the end
of April this year. These sales are to last for the remaining
2 years five months of the Agreement.
If sales continue at the
rate we have seen over the last two months at around an average
of 10 tonnes these sales will last just over a year before they
are complete and will terminate.
However, not all the signatories
have announced the sales they intended to make during the agreement.
The two nations that kept quiet about their inteneded sales are
Spain and Belgium. Yes, the Table gives the history of the sales
from these nations and we can pick up the history of the selling
that these two made in the past.
- A glance at these show that
Belgium has not sold for the last 19 months. We have no reason
to believe they have more to sell in the remaining Agreement
period.
a
- Spain on the other hand has
sold 147.1 tonnes to date. Last year the Central Bank of Spain
led us to believe that these sales were tied into the maturing
of Call Options they had sold, that were now being taken up.
The pattern of present sales gives us reason to believe the
same is happening now. Clearly the prices at which the Central
Bank of Span sold these would have been the gold prices of up
to 5 years ago [$350+?], a sad sight to the Members of that Bank's
board of Directors, let alone the Spanish public. Spain has
sold 54.6 tonnes since the beginning of the year, the bulk of
it in March [40 tonnes]. The total sales levels for the last
two complete years, indicates that we are near to the completion
of this year's sales by Spain.
We suspected France has been
a seller of note and is likely to continue to sell until it has
exhausted its allocation of gold for selling. As Sarkozy was
the Finance Minister at the time of the announcement of France's
selling [clearly to an unhappy Banque de France] and with his
prospects of being the next President of France, we expect the
full amount of 600 tonnes to be sold.
So where does this all lead
us to?
- If the present selling rate
continues at around 10 tonnes a week for the balance of this
C.B.G.A. year, then expect another 200 tonnes to be sold before
the 26th September this year. This leaves 400 tonnes for the
next two remaining years of the Agreement, ignoring Spain.
200 tonnes per annum is just not a threat to the gold
price and well down on the level of the 500 tonne 'ceiling'.
a
- Should Spain sell in the same
way it has to date, then expect next year to see the February
to May period see around 60 tonnes over the next two years from
Spain alone? But there is no way of knowing if this will be
the case. It is even possible that these sales are terminating
now?
a
- If we stretch out the remaining
announced sales over the remainder of the agreement, then we
will see only approximately 4 tonnes a week sold until the agreement
runs out.
a
- The unavoidable conclusion
we reach is that Central Bank gold sales will not continue
to hold the price back for much longer. The signatories
involved must have that in mind and for gold to continue as an
accepted Reserve Asset in their vaults, they would be wise to
sell in such a manner so as to lower the likelihood of price
'spikes' in the market, so bring back the confidence to gold
as a monetary metal, it once had.
a
- If this is not their intention
but sales are to continue at these high levels then it is possible
we will see no more Central Bank Sales from these signatories
from this time next year onwards?
a
- Oh, we have not mentioned
the purchases of gold by Central Banks [Greece and non-signatory
banks]?
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for the entire report.
May 4, 2007
-Julian
D.W. Phillips
email: gold-authenticmoney@iafrica.com
321gold Ltd
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