Gold Forecaster
- Global Watch
The future of Central Bank
Selling of Gold
Julian D.W.
Phillips
Gold Forecaster snippet
Nov 9, 2007
Central Bank
Gold Agreement
(As at the 2nd November
2007)
Notes to table: -
1) This now includes
the unannounced sales for both years from Spain &
Belgium, which totaled 177.1 tonnes for the two years.
2) We have excluded the unannounced sales from
the totals so as to retain accurate levels of decline in announced
sales.
3) Germany's sales were for coins, which we do not regard
as part of the announced sales for the purposes of this situation.
4) The remaining sales for individual countries will be
corrected once the three monthly figures are available. The total
is the most accurate figure, but will be adjusted then too.
5) Switzerland's additional 250 tonnes to be sold has
been included.
6) We have now included Russia's purchases for last year.
In the week ending 26th October 2007, the decrease of
€126 million in gold and gold receivables reflected sales
of gold by two Eurosystem central banks (consistent with the
Central Bank Gold Agreement of 27th September 2004) of 7.25 tonnes
approximately.
What looks to be persistently
high gold sales by the signatories of the Central Bank gold Agreement
in the first month of the fourth year of the five year agreement,
we contemplate what lies ahead for the agreement and the sales
from there. It would seem that the Swiss are the larger of the
two sellers, with either the French or the European Central bank
as the other seller. If the past is indicative of the present,
the Swiss will continue selling at this pace until they have
completed their sales in the first quarter of next year. Each
week of these high sales gives us more certainty on that. A look
at the Table above paints a dramatic picture of the sales going
forward into the new year.
We would ask you to look at
two features on the table: -
1. The tonnage remaining for sale is now down
to just over 650 tonnes and we have two more years of sales still
remaining. Granted, more announcements can be made but we only
expect unexpected sales from Spain to the extent of 100 tonnes.
- We know that the remaining
Swiss sales are around 6 - 8 tonnes a week with only around 100
tonnes remaining, so we guesstimate around 17 or less weeks before
these sales are exhausted, leaving a potential 650 tonnes remaining
including the Spanish 100 tonnes.
- If the Spanish repeat their
past performance their sales will be out of the way by May of
next year, leaving 550 tonnes for the duration of the agreement
[16 months, if the announced sellers do actually sell?
- Portugal did not sell last
year so may not sell any more, taking 100 tonnes out of this
550 tonnes leaving 450 tonnes for the duration.
- The balance of the announced
sellers have set a pattern of steady sales spread over the years.
With present demand failing to dent the rise of the gold price
it seems likely that such a drop in sales will add impetus to
future price rises.
2. The second dramatic factor in the tables above
are that in the final quarter of the C.B.G.A year Russia began
its long awaited purchases of gold for its reserves. As we forecast
these took the form of buying local production before it hit
the open market. President Putin made it clear to te Russian
Central Bank that he wanted gold reserves up to 10% of reserves,
but has not been obeyed to date. The start of these gold purchases
signals that this policy may have begun. If so, Russian production
at just over 200 tonnes to 250 tonnes a year will be the initial
target of the buying. This is important because at a time when
new gold supplies to the market are set to fall after next year,
such buying can be taken off the above sales. So whether it is
88 tonnes [based on the above] or the entire 200+ tonnes Central
Bank supply to the market would net out at a potential 200 to
0 tonnes in the next two years!
There are great pressures on
Central Banks now to stop the sales og gold and to follow the
example of Russia. The prospect of currency crises is growing
by the day, and spreading fear of the value currencies will have
gong forward. In the past such pressures have forced Central
Banks to turn buyers of gold.
As the latest example of such
pressures we include this report from Hong Kong.
Currency pressures
to buy gold - The Hong Kong $
With the $ waning fast
and currency pressures across the globe, never has there been
a time when investors have needed safe-havens for their wealth.
At the front of these sits gold and later silver. Many feel that
the pressure may be short-term, but we believe it is systemic
and growing worse by the day. As the hemorrhaging of U.S. $ across
the world continues, smaller Central Banks are fighting to stop
their currencies from rising so as to protect the competitiveness
of their own currencies. If the pressure persists these banks
will be forced to take more regulatory measures such as imposing
controls on inflows. The latest reported incident of these is
in Hog Kong.
Hong Kong's de-facto central
bank stepped in four times last week to defend the Hong Kong
dollar's peg to the U.S. dollar, injecting about $800 million
worth of local currency into the red-hot market. The Hong Kong
Monetary Authority injected a total 6.2 billion Hong Kong dollars
($800 million) into the market. As the U.S. $ weakens so this
intervention will continue. Under Hong Kong's currency board
system, the Hong Kong $ is pegged at 7.80 to the U.S. $ but is
allowed to trade between 7.75 and 7.85. When the Hong Kong dollar
reaches the limits of its trading band, the monetary authority
can be expected to intervene. With the cut in U.S. interest rates
this week more upward pressure will come onto the HK$. By intervening,
Honk Kong releases more local currency, so importing inflation
and allowing more 'hot' money into their system. Such investments
can leave as quickly as they arrive contracting money supply
when they leave, bringing instability and eventual loss of control
over the money supply should such actions reach extremes. Inflow
Capital Controls are another way of coping with this problem
or a strong revaluation of the currency and a departure from
the $ peg.
The Hong Kong $ has been rising
against the U.S. $ as investors pour money into the soaring Hong
Kong stock market. The Hong Kong $ hovered near 7.75 to the U.S.
$ all morning last Wednesday before the Hong Kong Monetary Authority
began buying greenbacks to keep the local currency within the
trading range. This week's moves follow two interventions by
the HKMA last week, which were its first such actions in more
than two years, causing speculation that Hong Kong might widen
the peg, or drop it all together. The Hong Kong government is
"totally committed" to the linked exchange rate mechanism.
This is usually a prelude to actions to fully control the situation
along the line we mention here.
We conclude that there will
probably be no new announcements by Central Banks to sell gold,
rather those who could buy gold will overtake those selling gold?
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-Julian D.W. Phillips
email: gold-authenticmoney@iafrica.com
321gold Ltd
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