By Jessica Berthereau
London (AFP) - London's
century-old process for fixing gold prices, tainted by a rigging scandal
and attacked by critics as old-fashioned, goes under the spotlight this
week in key talks aimed at modernising the process.
Analysts said
that the market price of gold, which is driven by investment and
jewellery demand, could climb as a result of an overhaul.
Buyers
and sellers of the precious metal will meet in London on Monday to
discuss the setting of the global benchmark, which affects the flow of
billions of dollars worldwide every day.
The
World Gold Council (WGC) will host an eagerly-awaited forum with retail
and central banks, exchanges, mining firms, refiners, traders and other
industry groups, while Britain's Financial Conduct Authority (FCA)
watchdog will attend as an observer.
The benchmark gold price is set by four banks at 10:30 am London time (0930 GMT) and 3:00 pm, via teleconference.
The
banks -- Britain's Barclays and HSBC, Canada's Scotiabank and Societe
Generale of France -- are all members of the Gold Fixing Company and
agree the price twice daily. Germany's Deutsche Bank pulled out of the
panel earlier this year.
The
process begins with the so-called spot price of gold, which is based on
the current market rate of contracts for physical delivery of the metal.
The
four banks must then declare whether they are interested in buying or
selling at this level. The price can fluctuate depending on the balance
of supply and demand, and settles on a so-called "fixing".
The
system lurched into crisis this year when Barclays was fined more than
£26 million ($45 million, 33 million euros) by the FCA after a
ex-trader at the troubled bank admitted attempting to manipulate the
gold price.
Barclays is
among several banks that were fined billions of dollars by regulators
foreign exchange rigging, prompting a broad review of how global
financial benchmarks are set.
Critics argue the gold-price fixing process is also open to abuse.
"It
lacks transparency, which means prices can be rigged to benefit banks,
at the expense of producers, traders, investors, jewellers and other
market participants," said Mark O'Byrne, research director at broker
GoldCore.
"Prices should be determined by market forces of supply and demand and not due to a bank's determination."
The
process is little changed since its creation on September 12, 1919,
when the Gold Fixing Company's five founders -- including NM Rothschild
& Sons -- agreed one single daily price fix in British pounds.
O'Byrne
added: "The gold fix is anachronistic in the modern technological age
of electronic trading and a move to electronic trading seems inevitable.
At the same time, this will not be a panacea as oversight and
transparency remains important."
- Call for transparency -
Caroline
Bain, senior commodities economist at research consultancy Capital
Economics, said transparency was needed to prevent price rigging.
"It can be manipulated even though it is based on real deals," Bain told AFP.
"Traders
working for institutions involved in the 'fix' can make deals that
would influence the price in a way that suits their portfolio.
"There
is a lack of transparency about how the price is derived. It also
contributes to a much wider lack of information on the size of the gold
market."
For its part, the
WGC has already stated that the gold market needs greater transparency
and auditing of the data used to determine the London price fixings.
Between
two and four million ounces of physical gold transactions are based on
any given day's fix price, according to estimates from commodities
research specialist CPM Group.
Back
in May, Barclays was fined by the FCA for failing to adequately manage
conflicts of interest between the bank and its customers.
The
watchdog uncovered systems and controls failings in relation to a fixed
London pricing of gold over a nine-year period to 2013.
Bain
added: "The case was more about internal problems at Barclays as they
were not monitoring the trader's activity, but it did highlight the fact
that the gold fix can be manipulated."
- Volatile gold -
The
gold market remains subject to volatility as the metal is often seen as
a haven investment in times of geopolitical uncertainty.
In recent weeks, mounting violence in Iraq has sent traders fleeing to gold.
Gold jumped last Tuesday to a 3.5-month spot price high of $1,334.06 per ounce on the London Bullion Market.
Prices
had rocketed to an all-time peak of $1,921.15 per ounce in September
2011 on fears of a fresh global recession amid the raging eurozone debt
crisis.
The market could return once more to such levels if the fixing system is overhauled, according to O'Byrne."We believe that a more transparent and reliable fixing could lead to higher gold prices as we suspect that prices are artificially low at this time and do not reflect the delicate supply demand balance in the physical gold market," he told AFP.
"Nor do they capture the degree of systemic and geopolitical risk in the world today."
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