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China on gold-buying spree amid global push to end US dollar dominance

beijingwalker

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China on gold-buying spree amid global push to end US dollar dominance
Published time: 12 Feb, 2019 09:33
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Beijing has joined the global gold rush, increasing its gold reserves for two months in a row to 59.94 million ounces. China has long been silent on its holdings of gold as many countries are turning away from the greenback.

China’s national gold reserves rose by 0.38 million ounces (nearly 12 tons) at the end of January from 59.56 million ounces at the end of December 2018, according to data released by the People’s Bank of China on Monday. The value the country’s holdings of the precious metal reached US$79.319 billion, increasing by more than $3 billion compared to the end of last year.

Before December, the Chinese central bank had not reported an increase in gold reserves for more than two years, and the official figures remained unchanged from October 2016 to November 2018, standing at 59.24 million ounces.

Gold prices surged following the news, with futures climbing to $1,315.20 per ounce on Tuesday.

Meanwhile, China’s foreign exchange reserves rose by $15.2 billion in January to $3.088 trillion. That is nearly $6 billion more than economists polled by Reuters expected. The surge came as the yuan hit its highest level against the US dollar in over six months, driven by hopes for progress in US-China trade talks.

The amount of gold added by global central banks to their coffers in 2018 hit the second highest annual amount on record, according to World Gold Council (WGC) estimates. Countries bought 651.5 metric tons last year, and now hold nearly 34,000 tons. Russia led the gold purchases as it seeks to reduce its reliance on the US dollar, followed by other big buyers like Turkey, Kazakhstan, India, Iraq, Poland, and Hungary.

China is also trying “to diversify its reserves” away from the greenback, according to Jeffrey Halley, senior market analyst at currency broker OANDA. The analyst told the South China Morning Post that the state of affairs in global politics, including a trade war with the US, are driving China’s interest to buy gold as a “safe haven hedge.”

In January, China dropped to sixth place among the world’s largest holders of the yellow metal behind Russia. With its 67.6 million ounces of gold, Russia now stands in fifth place behind the US, Germany, France, and Italy.

https://www.rt.com/business/451259-china-expands-gold-reserves/
 
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China's increase in gold holdings isn't quite so secretive. For example, China has had a long-standing arrangement with South Africa to buy fifty tons of gold a year. Then there is the amount China adds to its reserves from domestic and other sources. All told, I think China has been accumulating gold reserves at the rate of about one hundred tons per year for the fifteen years 2001-2016, after panic-dumping its gold reserves during the 1998 Asian currency crisis.

A sharp increase like that reported last month, however, is a bit unusual and raises questions: are these normal open-market operations or does the increase reflect attempts by China to bypass international fiat currency payment systems to further otherwise-forbidden trade with Iran and North Korea?

I'm inclined to believe these are normal seasonal operations as China gold demand increases ahead of the Chinese new year and China's reserves must increase temporarily as a result. To convince me that the increase reflects a push by China to "end U.S. dollar dominance" would require supplying data for several months throughout the year, not just December-January or January-February.
 
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China's increase in gold holdings isn't quite so secretive. For example, China has had a long-standing arrangement with South Africa to buy fifty tons of gold a year. Then there is the amount China adds to its reserves from domestic and other sources. All told, I think China has been accumulating gold reserves at the rate of about one hundred tons per year for the fifteen years 2001-2016, after panic-dumping its gold reserves during the 1998 Asian currency crisis.

A sharp increase like that reported last month, however, is a bit unusual and raises questions: are these normal open-market operations or does the increase reflect attempts by China to bypass international fiat currency payment systems to further otherwise-forbidden trade with Iran and North Korea?

I'm inclined to believe these are normal seasonal operations as China gold demand increases ahead of the Chinese new year and China's reserves must increase temporarily as a result. To convince me that the increase reflects a push by China to "end U.S. dollar dominance" would require supplying data for several months throughout the year, not just December-January or January-February.

Plus there is the windfall of clearing out Venezuela’s gold reserves (oops sorry...China is only trying to “help” them...more like help themselves)
 
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That is the way, buy it
Good job

Not start a coup de tat and steal like the world's biggest warmonger
 
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