EU Considering Deposit Withdrawal Restrictions And Capital Controls
Gold
is slightly lower in all major currencies this morning but remains near
a 4 week high, underpinned by safe haven demand due to concern of a
financial meltdown in Cyprus and the risk of contagion in other
European countries.
Gold bullion is headed for its second consecutive weekly rise and its biggest weekly rise in four months.
Gold
is 1.4% higher in dollar terms and 2.5% higher in euro terms. In
British pounds, gold has consolidated after the gains seen in sterling
in recent weeks and is 0.8% higher for the week.
The
clock is ticking for Cyprus to come up with a solution to clinch an
international ‘bailout’, otherwise it could face the collapse of its
financial system and exit from the euro zone.
There
is a slow but creeping realisation that this crisis will almost
certainly escalate. Financial contagion could ensue due to risks to
payment systems and bank deposits which are often guaranteed by near
insolvent governments.
Events
in Cyprus look like that they could precipitate bank runs in Greece,
Spain and Italy with obvious negative ramifications for the entire EU
banking and financial system.
Senior
euro zone officials acknowledged in a confidential conference call
yesterday that they were "in a mess" and discussed imposing capital
controls to insulate the currency area from a possible collapse of the
Cypriot economy.
In Brussels, a senior European Union official told Reuters that an ECB withdrawal would mean forcing Cyprus to abandon the euro.
The
ECB has warned of the "great danger" of a bank run once banks reopen
next week and has said that they may enforce capital controls
overriding the government of Cyprus. Other draconian restrictions on
people's private property include an indefinite “freezing” of savings
accounts, making bank or wire transfers dependent on central bank
approval and lower ATM and bank deposit withdrawal limits.
While,
the capital controls will be designed "so that citizens have access to
sufficient cash to go about their lives", they are likely to lead to a
further collapse of consumer confidence in Cyprus and the collapse of
commerce as businesses are greatly hampered in carrying out every day
business activities.
This is not the first time this has happened in the EU and unfortunately, it will not be the last time.
Only
last June, the Bank of Italy authorized the suspension of payments by
Bank Network Investments Spa (BNI) without communicating anything to
depositors. The BNI, a large Italian bank, suspended operations and
clients with bank accounts could not write checks, pay bills, make
mortgage payments, and use ATMs or debit and credit cards.
At
the time, it was reported that not alone was the EU considering
imposing a limit on the amount of money that can be withdrawn from ATMs
but they were also considering imposing border checks and introducing
currency controls to stop a flight of capital out of European countries.
As
well as limiting cash withdrawals and imposing capital controls, the EU
discussed suspending the Schengen Agreement, which allows for visa-free
travel among 26 countries, including most of the EU, though not Britain
and Ireland.
While
EU officials may again manage to patch things up and not implement such
extreme measures in the short term, unfortunately extreme measures seem
quite likely in the long term given the scale of the crisis in the EU.
There is also the risk of Japan, the UK and U.S. seeing their various
debt crises deepening in the coming months and similar capital controls
are more than possible.
These are risks that we have long warned of and it gives us no pleasure to see them come to pass.
However,
people who own physical bullion in their possession and in safe storage
internationally remain positioned and prepared for these threats.
These real risks have huge implications and ramifications that most have yet to fully consider and comprehend.
The silly debate as to whether gold is a safe haven or not, or a bubble or not, will be seen for what it is very soon.
Those,
such as Paul Krugman, Nouriel Roubini and Warren Buffett, who have
suggested gold is a barbaric relic, is a bubble and is not a safe
haven, and have dissuaded investors from diversifying some of their
wealth into gold, will be shown to have misled investors and savers and
will lose credibility.
They
will no doubt engage in some furious back pedalling and claim that
“nobody saw this coming” when indeed there have been many financial and
economic analysts warning about exactly these risks for years.
Rather
than sitting nervously and passively and awaiting the coming financial
dislocations and expropriations, investors and savers need to be
prepared for the uncertain financial scenarios that seem increasingly
likely.
One
of the most published academics on gold in the world, Dr Brian Lucey of
Trinity College Dublin (TCD) wrote yesterday that "the research
evidence is that gold is usually a safe haven asset”.
Lucey pointed out how physical gold is financial insurance or a hedge against political uncertainty:
“Interestingly
financial gold, such as ETFs etc are useful as safe havens against
economic events and physical gold against political events. Both are in
play in Cyprus and so the safe haven nature of gold should continue to
provide comfort for purchasers."
Hoping for the best, but preparing for less benign scenarios remains prudent.
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