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GOLD
SALES - THE REASONING BEHIND SWITZERLAND'S POLICY DECISION
Excerpts
from GLOBAL WATCH:
THE GOLD FORECASTER
by Julian D.W.
Phillips
June 29, 2007
The
classic question has to be asked again, what is the price of gold? If we
answer $xxx, then we have to ask the next question, what is the price of
a $?
Is
the $ so reliable a store of value that it can be used as a measure of
gold? This questions the very foundation of the paper currency system.
Can one trust the $ or even the international monetary system? It’s
all a question of degree.
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The
U.S. holds mainly gold in its reserves, because it is the issuer of
the globe’s reserve currency. This does imply that it is
completely dependent on its own currency, the $, in the global
economy. As the foundation of the world’s monetary system, should
the currency lose the confidence of its own or other nation’s
citizens, the international money and trade relations across the
world will be damaged severely. It is thought that this process is
well under way.
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The
Eurozone community’s Central Bank drew off 15% of its reserves in
gold from its members. This does not mean they intend to only hold
15% of its reserves in gold, nor does it imply that there is a rigid
exchange rate between gold & the €. But the question of how to
measure 15 of reserves is raised. From the beginning of the Central
Bank Gold Agreement the E.C.B. decided to sell a fixed tonnage of
235 tonnes of these reserves for paper currencies, ostensibly to
keep this rough proportion in their reserves. The E.C.B. is fully
aware of the dangers of measuring gold in the $ and in the € for
that matter, but for the sound functioning of the paper currency
world it is crucial that gold be subject to measurements in paper
currency terms and not the other way around. With the higher prices
this is around 25% of the E.C.B. reserves, perhaps a level they
prefer?
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Germany,
who gained the option to sell up to 500 tonnes of its gold, has not
done so, citing that “gold is a useful counter to the swings in
the $”. Of course a doubling in the price of gold since making
this decision is paying off handsomely. We commend the pragmatism of
the Germans, for reserves are there for a rainy day and are not a
pension fund scheme to make it grow profitably. Certainly this can
be a secondary objective but never take over first place. The
reserves have to be credible in times of distress and acceptable to
all ones trading partners. Germany is aware that the times are a
changing and are keeping their eye on the future of the global
economic and monetary order and guarding against it.
-
Italy
has no plans to sell any gold, which is unsurprising given the very
poor history of the Italian Lira. They too have seen several
currencies come and go in the last one hundred years, so they have
few illusions about the joys of compound interest, after all adding
noughts to a currency doesn’t make them more valuable, it’s the
buying power that counts. So, will the $ today, with interest added
over the next decade or two, be worth more than today’s equivalent
in gold in a decade or two?
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The
Swiss Franc has always been one of the most stable of the globe’s
currencies within one of the most stable and constant of economies.
In times of global war or uncertainty, this peaceful anti-war
country becomes itself a ‘safe-haven’ for foreigner’s savings.
So it is almost a source of safe money and financial security in
itself. So their concept of a rainy day contains far less moisture
than other countries. It is therefore financially more secure and
less dependent on its reserves than other countries whilst being
small enough to adjust if reserve holdings within the foreign
exchange markets capacities at present. With the mix of gold and
currencies in their portfolio, their character being taken into
account, you can be sure they have covered their backs on the risk
front and stand to gain either way the cookie crumbles. So it is of
little account that they sell some more gold. We see it as a gesture
of support for the paper currency system, a gesture they see as
protecting their overall reserves portfolio.
So
why sell gold, or more pertinently, why sell a little gold and retain
sufficient for bad times? It is to ensure the retention of value in the
overall portfolio; it is not the getting rid of the gold content
therein.
Clearly,
Switzerland with its constantly sound position as bankers to the wealthy
of Europe and its dependence on the banking industry, has a vested
interest in a mix of global paper currencies more so than those nations
that have an unsound Balance of Payments, smaller reserves and face
greater economic risks in the global economy [Other countries with
current account deficits include Australia, New Zealand, Britain,
France, Italy, Greece, Spain, Czech Republic, Poland, India, Pakistan,
Colombia, Mexico, Hungary, Turkey, South Africa and others].
The
big question is will gold have a greater real value in times of
distress than yield earning national currencies? In the last world war,
what value did the Deutschmark or the U.S.$ have internationally
[remember forgery is one of the acceptable weapons of war]? And what
value did gold have? – No contest.
With
economic power shifting Eastwards and the Asian nations growing away
from their dependence on the U.S. economy, inevitably reserve currency
dependence such as we are used to with the $, is changing, is
fragmenting with other currencies coming onto the scene and with
national interests clashing and exerting pressure on the different
important global currencies. Should these pressures grow beyond a
certain almost indefinable point, then paper currencies will not garner
the same level of confidence as they do now, and the unquestionable
international reliability of gold as a measure of value will ascend
above paper money.
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Prime
Minister Brown of the U.K. went the way Switzerland is, again,
going to go in 1998, looking for a more profitable content [?] to
the U.K.’s gold and foreign exchange reserves and paid a heavy
price that is growing as the gold price rises. Did he act for
political reasons in support of the € and the more controllable
paper currency system? We believe Switzerland may be following the
same line of reasoning as Brown did. After all, if we measured the
proceeds achieved from the last sale and the total value of those
plus the interest thereon, what would the shortfall against
today’s value of that gold? |
So
the mix of foreign exchange and gold reserves is essentially a gamble on
the future.

© 2007 Julian D. W.
Phillips
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