www.zerohedge.com
The Bundesbank, Germany’s powerful central bank, announced very publicly
this morning the further repatriation of some of it’s gold being held
in foreign locations – namely in Paris and New York with the Bank of
France and the Federal Reserve.
“The Bundesbank successfully continued and further stepped up its transfers of gold,” the central bank said in a statement.
“Implementation of our new gold storage plan is proceeding smoothly.
Operations are running very much according to schedule,” said
Carl-Ludwig Thiele, Member of the Executive Board of the Deutsche
Bundesbank.
“We also called on the expertise of the Bank for International
Settlements for the spot checks that had to be carried out. As expected,
there were no irregularities,” Thiele said.
Germany’s gold reserves are the second biggest in the world after
those of the United States. The World Gold Council’s latest data shows
Germany’s gold reserves at 3,384.2 tonnes today.
The Bundesbank also helpfully provided tables in its press release,
presumably in an attempt to create further transparency and
understanding of the issue which remains an important one to large
sections of the German political and financial class and the public who
are concerned about a new Eurozone debt crisis and the fate of the euro.
According to the German central bank’s own data, 1,447 tonnes are
stored at the Federal Reserve Bank in New York, 438 tonnes at the Bank
of England in London and 307 tonnes at the Banque de France in Paris.
Since the transfers began in 2013, the Bundesbank said it has
relocated a total of 157 tonnes of gold to Frankfurt – 67 tonnes from
Paris and 90 tonnes from New York.
“In 2014, 120 tonnes of gold were transferred to Frankfurt from
storage locations abroad: 35 tonnes from Paris and 85 tonnes from New
York,” according to the statement.
This suggests that the Bundesbank continues to struggle to get its gold reserves back from the New York Federal Reserve.
It is important to remember that out of nowhere, the Netherlands secretly repatriated 122 tonnes of the their gold reserves from New York to Amsterdam in 2014.
Since World War II and Germany’s defeat in that war and during the
Cold War, Germany’s gold holdings have been kept in the vaults of other
central banks – the Banque de France, the Bank of England and the New
York Federal Reserve.
Since the global debt crisis and indeed the U.S. and Eurozone debt
crisis, there have been grassroots movements for central banks to
repatriate their gold to home soil – in order to ensure that it can be
used a a reserve asset in the event of a monetary crisis.
Germany expects to have repatriated half of it’s gold reserves for
storage in Frankfurt by 2020. Today’s announcement suggests that 23% of
the total reserves to be returned to Germany has been delivered.
In its statement the Bundesbank is at great pains to emphasise the authentic nature of the transfer.
“The Bundesbank assures the identity and authenticity of German gold
reserves throughout the transfer process – from when they are removed
from warehouses abroad until they are stored in Frankfurt am Main.”
“As soon as the gold was removed from the warehouse locations abroad,
Bundesbank employees cross-checked the lists of bars belonging to the
Bundesbank against the information on the bars removed. Finally, once
they arrived in Frankfurt am Main, all the transferred gold bars were
thoroughly and exhaustively inspected and verified by the Bundesbank.”
“When all the inspections had been concluded, no irregularities came
to light with regard to the authenticity, fineness and weight of the
bars.”
However, a curious element to the statement will likely trigger some
speculation among those familiar with the gold market. “The Bundesbank
took advantage of the transfer from New York to have roughly 50 tonnes
of gold melted down and recast according to the London Good Delivery
standard, today’s internationally recognised standard.”
Long time observers will note that Germany’s initial request for it’s
gold from New York was declined. They were then denied the opportunity
to even view their own gold on grounds of “security.”
This led to speculation that the Federal Reserve – who have not had a
public audit of gold stocks since 1953 – did not have the gold reserves
it was supposed to be custodian of. The immediate melting down of fifty
tonnes of gold before it could be publicly audited in Germany will not
alleviate these suspicions.
From a wider perspective this story reaffirms the fact that central
banks today, the monetary masters of the fiat currencies we use, still
view gold as a vital safe haven monetary asset and reserve currency. It
also indicates a lack of trust between central banks, a trust which
seems to have been further undermined by the chaos created by the
apparent unilateral move by Switzerland’s SNB last week.
We remind our customers to take the advice of Dr. Marc Faber by
becoming their own central bank. Now, more than ever, it is essential
to own gold in allocated, segregated accounts in safest vaults in the
world, in the safest jurisdictions in the world.
We believe that other central banks may have already quietly sought
or indeed will seek repatriation of their gold from London and New York.
This has the potential to create the long awaited short squeeze as
central banks are forced to enter the market to acquire the physical
bullion that they thought they already owned.
We believe, like the Dutch and the Germans, that only gold bullion in your possession or allocated gold stored in secure locations such as Singapore, Hong Kong and Zurich can be viewed as a safe-haven asset.
Gold climbed $17.00 or 1.35% to $1,275.50 per ounce on Friday and silver soared $0.83 or 4.92% to $17.69 per ounce.
Spot gold fell 0.3 percent at $1,276.10 in London trading today,
while Comex U.S. gold futures for February delivery were down 70 cents
an ounce at $1,276.20. The U.S. observes a national holiday today for
Martin Luther King and market liquidity is expected to be thin.
Gold has consolidated on last week’s strong gains as the eurozone
braces itself for the European Central Bank which is expected to
announce some form of bond buying program at their meeting this
Thursday.
On Sunday, Greece’s general elections are being closely
watched as the Syriza party who are for debt renegotiation, still
command the lead in the polls.
The world’s largest gold backed ETF, SPDR Gold Trust, have seen
their holdings climb 13.7 tonnes to 730.89 tonnes on Friday, its largest
one-day inflow in nearly 3-1/2 years.
Silver was down 0.4 percent at $17.80 an ounce. Platinum was down 0.4
percent at $1,258.44 an ounce and palladium was up 1.3 percent at $770
an ounce. Palladium went the opposite way of other precious metals last
week and fell 6.1 percent, its biggest weekly drop since June 2013.
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