Is there a Sword of Damocles hanging over gold’s head? Here’s why U.S. and IMF gold holdings aren’t as big a deal as some think...
Last week, I promised to answer this popular question:
“Hey JL, what about all that gold in the vaults of the IMF and Fort Knox? Aren’t you worried they might try to dump it on the market?”
But before we get to that, a quick correction. In Friday’s piece, Europocalypse, I made reference to Colonel Kurtz as a “deranged flyboy lost deep in the Congo.”
The film-buff contingent among you corrected me with relish. Kurtz was in Cambodia, not the Congo, at the height of the Vietnam War when the movie took place.
My apologies... in Joseph Conrad’s novella, Heart of Darkness, Kurtz is a rogue ivory trader lost in the Congo. (Conrad himself drew on personal experiences as the captain of a Congo steamer in writing Heart of Darkness.)
Clearly the book and movie are two distinct entities. In referring to “a flyboy lost deep in the Congo,” I accidentally conflated the two.
Given the glee that some of your e-mails displayed, I’m tempted to hide future Easter eggs in my pop-culture references.
Anyhow, moving on...
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A Golden Sword of Damocles?
It’s true – the United States and the IMF (International Monetary Fund) have a lot of gold in reserve. Some of you fear a good chunk of that gold could be dumped on the market, acting as a sharp break to the yellow metal’s rise.
Let’s start by asking the question, just how much gold do these guys have?
The World Gold Council regularly updates the stats on official holdings of central bank reserves. According to December 2008 data from the WGC, the U.S. holds 8,133.5 tonnes (metric tons) of gold. The IMF holds 3,217.3 tonnes.
When you do the math, that adds up to 11,350.8 metric tons (tonnes), or 12,512 short tons, of gold. Converted to ounces at $1,000 per ounce, that’s a touch over $400 billion bucks worth of bullion.
Does this count as a lot? Yes and no.
On one hand, it represents 8-10% (very roughly) of all the gold in the world. On the other hand, there are a heck of a lot more dollars in the world... and demand is the key driver to consider here.
Big Buyers in the Wings
Take Russia, for example. Russia has recently stated its intent to raise total gold holdings to 10% of total reserves.
Again according to the World Gold Council, Russia held 495.9 tonnes of gold as of December ’08, accounting for just 2.2% of reserves.
We can do the math and see that, for Russia to hit its stated target of raising gold holdings to 10% of reserves (assuming total reserve values don’t change), they would need to purchase 1,758 tonnes of gold in the open market.
By stating a desire to up their gold holdings to 10% of reserves, Russia has all but said “Yeah, we wouldn’t mind owning another 1,750 tonnes of gold or so.” And that’s just Russia.
When you think about it, 10% is a pretty modest allocation. You think China wouldn’t like to have more of its dollar mountain converted to gold?
What central bank wouldn’t want to have 10% of its assets (or more) in bullion at a time like this, with paper currencies getting debased like crazy and creeping geopolitical tensions around the globe?
Below is a table showing a cross section of central banks with sizable gold holdings and low percentages of total reserves.
You can see from the table how many tonnes (metric tons) each of these banks would have to buy in order to get their total allocation up to 10%.
Country |
Dec 2008 gold holdings (tonnes) |
Dec 2008 % of total reserves |
Est. holdings at 10% reserve target |
Additional required to hit 10% |
Japan |
765.2 |
1.9 |
4,027 |
3,262 |
China |
600.0 |
0.9 |
6,667 |
6,067 |
Russia |
495.9 |
2.2 |
2,254 |
1,758 |
Taiwan |
422.4 |
3.6 |
1,173 |
751 |
India |
357.7 |
3.0 |
1,192 |
834 |
Singapore |
127.4 |
1.8 |
708 |
581 |
Turkey |
116.1 |
3.6 |
323 |
207 |
Poland |
103.0 |
3.4 |
303 |
200 |
Thailand |
84.0 |
1.9 |
442 |
358 |
Malaysia |
36.4 |
0.8 |
455 |
419 |
14,437 |
Remember, the U.S. and the IMF hold roughly 11,351 metric tons of gold.
If just these 10 central banks elected to raise their reserve allocations to 10%, they could hoover up all that U.S. and IMF gold by themselves (and still be hungry for more). And believe me, there are plenty more than these 10 with the same thoughts... not to mention institutional demand, don’t even get me started on that.
This doesn’t paint anything close to the total picture, of course. But it should help give you a better grasp of supply and demand. Right now, demand for gold is high and rising... and there just isn’t that much of it left to go round in the world.
“We Hate You Guys”
Part of the reason many of these banks haven’t upped their total gold holdings, by the way, is because it’s hard for them to buy gold without running the price up. You’re just not seeing that much supply on the open market relative to total demand.
This is why some central bankers despair that they have nowhere to go but into U.S. dollars and U.S. Treasury bonds. The amount of available gold on the market is so small, relative to the amounts that would be desirable for them to own, that trying to get the reserve percentages up is a very tough task.
That is why Luo Ping, director-general of the China Banking Regulatory Commission, had this to say a few weeks ago:
Except for US Treasuries, what can you hold? Gold? You don’t hold Japanese government bonds or UK bonds. US Treasuries are the safe haven. For everyone, including China, it is the only option... We hate you guys. Once you start issuing $1 trillion-$2 trillion... we know the dollar is going to depreciate, so we hate you guys but there is nothing much we can do.
If gold suddenly became easier to buy in the open market, bankers like Luo Ping would quickly change their tune.
“Oh, you want to sell gold in size? That’s wonderful, because we want to BUY in size... something, anything that will hold its long-term store of value better than these stupid treasury bonds! Thank you, Thank you!”
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Remembering Gordon “Goldfinger” Brown
The world’s bankers, too, will no doubt remember the lesson of Gordon “Goldfinger” Brown.
Gordon Brown, now prime minister of the U.K., was treasury minister back in May 1999. In that capacity, Mr. Brown decided to dump half of Britain’s gold reserves at 20-year lows, as the Sunday Times reports:
GATHERED around a table in one of the Bank of England’s grand meeting rooms, the select group of Britain’s top gold traders could not believe what they were being told.
Gordon Brown had decided to sell off more than half of the country’s centuries-old gold reserves and the chancellor was intending to announce his plan later that day.
It was May 1999 and the gold price had stagnated for much of the decade. The traders present — including senior executives from at least two big investment banks — warned that Brown, who was not at the meeting, could barely have chosen a worse moment.
…“The timing of the decision was ludicrous. We told them you are going to push the gold price down before you sell,” said Peter Fava, then head of precious metal dealing at HSBC who was present at the meeting. “We thought it was a disastrous decision; we couldn’t understand it. We brought up a lot of potential problems at the meeting.”
…The decision to sell 400 tons of gold is seen in City circles as a financial bungle on the scale of the Tories’ “Black Wednesday” that cost the taxpayer £3.3 billion, according to Treasury estimates.
Dominic Hall, a former gold dealer who now runs thebulliondesk.com, a website for the gold market, said: “Brown was keen to throw mud at the opposition over Black Wednesday but this was a financial disaster on a similar scale.”
Dumping 400 metric tons of gold over the side at prices well below $300 per ounce was an epically dumb decision – something that is all too clear today. At present-day prices, that is much more than the Tories’ debacle of 3.3 billion pounds sterling lost... it is more on the order of ten billion pounds sterling lost.
So it is doubtful that many bankers today will want to emulate the stupidity of Gordon “Goldfinger” Brown, especially with the public so aware of what’s happening in the world. To sell gold now and trade it for what – Dollars? Euros, are you kidding me? – would serve as open invitation to be publicly tarred and feathered.
Bluffing Into the Nuts
We’ll close with a quick poker analogy.
In No Limit Texas Hold ‘Em, to hold “the nuts” means you can’t be beaten – that your hole cards in combination with the board give you the best possible hand.
Needless to say, it is useless to bluff a player who is holding the nuts. Why would they fold? They know they have the best hand. If you raise such a player, they will happily call... or better yet shove their own stack in the middle, a reraise to put you all-in.
If the Fed or the IMF were to dump gold onto the market in this environment, I believe it would be the poker equivalent of bluffing into the nuts. I don’t think the powers that be are that dumb.
But even if they were, what would happen? If they tried to increase the gold supply discreetly, the central banks and institutional holders who are quietly accumulating bullion would simply pick up the pace a little.
If they tried to talk down gold in the open market, blathering about how they planned to sell a huge chunk, gold might take a sizable short-term hit... but then it would bounce back, and then what they do?
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written by den, June 21, 2010
Knox; Yes they once held that. But now they have valuable gold plated tungsten instead. No audit, no truth.
Ask bullshit Bear-nake, who does not understand why gold is going up. You can't make this stuff up!.
In Canada Scotiabank issued gold certificates. When someone got in there to see there was near none. He had to get delivery of silver from China, 6 weeks! 12,000 oz I thought. Scotiabank said they had the right to settle in paper, so no problem.
written by Ronald Bushnell, February 07, 2010
written by mercedesrules, March 03, 2009
written by goldbug, March 02, 2009
written by IndianaJohn, March 02, 2009
Could it be that The Fort is too big to audit?
written by R. de Graaf, March 02, 2009
In my opinion, this will surely not interfere with the open market gold trade.
my 2 eurocents ;)
written by Miroslav, March 02, 2009
I don't think that the danger to the gold price comes from the Fed or the IMF dumping their reserves, but rather from a Fed coordinated short selling spree by the top US banks. There is some evidence that this in fact happened mid 2008 when the short positions of (unidentified) banks reached some $80bn and the price of gold subsequently fell from above $1,000 to below $750. Also, reserve banks of Russia and China are unlikely to buy gold on the open market (as such buying would increase the spot price). They are more likely to enter into long term (secret) contracts with their local gold producers and use some of their dollar reserves to pay for the gold.
Regards
MK
written by jt, March 01, 2009
I and many others don't believe for one second they actually have it. Fort Knox hasn't been indpdtly audited since the '50s, and in the meantime the status of the supposed gold there has mysteriously changed to something that could be interpreted as meaning "well, we figure we can get it from some other places [like in the ground perhaps??] if we need it."
And there's a HUGE question about the IMF's supposed gold hoard. Some experts believe that that gold does not actually exist apart from the CBs stashes themselves, ie, that this is gold somehow, or in some form, "promised" to the IMF, ie, the only way the IMF could sell it would be to have the CBs holding it actually sell it. But wouldn't it be "interesting" (that's the understatement of the century) if the reason the US voted against it the last time is that they've already sold / swapped / and/or leased out all that gold, and so couldn't vote to let the IMF sell if they wanted??
Just some thots...
written by fred goldstein, March 01, 2009
written by Jim, March 01, 2009
The Russians could acquire this gold by taking bullion in payment of tax, the same goes for the Chinese. Also the Chinese are smart, they aren't going to announce they are moving out of the dollar, they will do it stealthily.
written by pywong, March 01, 2009
4) Gold (including gold deposits and, if appropriate, gold swapped) USD Million: 379.00
http://www.bnm.gov.my/index.php?ch=12&pg=293&sdate=2009-01-30
Note the phrase "gold swapped". That means the gold could have been leased out. This phrase did not appear before.
written by Joe, March 01, 2009
written by Joe, March 01, 2009
written by Dave Wiesen, March 01, 2009
What would happen if the GLD ETF and SLV ETF dump their bullion at the same time that the IMF announces dumping their GOLD bullion? Especially if JM Morgan also sells their massive LONG positions on the COMEX (CRIMEX)?
Thanks,
Dave







The Constitution of the United States holds in article 1; section 10 that all US citizens are to be bearers of gold & silver coins (specie) & not paper "I Owe U Nothing Paper $'s"! This would be the audit of Fort Knox in our exclusive pockets where we would know the gold is stored without undue speculations. Find the "Coinage Act of 1972" on the internet, for specifics of the weights & measures regards the various coins to be exclusively issued to US citiizens of which we now have none; unless we buy US gold/silver eagles etc. If the US Constitution is to be believed without undue influences/interferences, then regards gold stored for us in Fort Knox "who'se got our money"? Gold/silver coins (specie) acrue no interest nor debt ; while Federal Reserve Notes are nothing but paper accumulated indebtedness via interest bearing bonds whose proceeds are to be provided to the Federal Reserve Corporation which is a private enterprise & not Federal at all. The Constitutionally mandated, article 1; section 10, gold/silver coins were to be issued not only interest free but free of charge from the US Tresury Dept. utilizing our gold hoard for the fulfillment of the Coinage Act Of 1792. Please get informed ASAP & get your/our money out of the hands of politically motivated beauroucrates to spend instread of their indebting, fiat paper money scheems that are now robing us all via their (not our) inflationary policies sense the Fed was launched back in 1913! STOP THEIR ROBBERIES OF OUR MONETARY STAKE IN LIFE NOW!!
Russ Smith, California