What
does this say about a country like New Zealand that does not appear
to have any gold holdings?
Putin
Turns Black Gold Into Bullion as Russia Out-Buys World
When Vladimir
Putin says the U.S. is endangering the global economy by abusing
its dollar monopoly, he’s not just talking. He’s betting on it
11
Febraury, 2013
.
Not
only has Putin made Russia the world’s largest oil producer, he’s
also made it the biggest gold buyer. His central bank has added 570
metric tons of the metal in the past decade, a quarter more than
runner-up China, according to IMF
data compiled
by Bloomberg. The added gold is also almost triple the weight of
the Statue
of Liberty.
“The
more gold a country has, the more sovereignty it will have if there’s
a cataclysm with the dollar, the euro, the pound or any other reserve
currency,” Evgeny
Fedorov,
a lawmaker for Putin’s United Russia party in the lower house of
parliament, said in a telephone interview in Moscow.
Gold,
coveted by Russian rulers including Tsar
Nicholas II and
the Bolshevik leader whose forces assassinated him, Vladimir
Lenin,
has soared almost 400 percent in the period of Putin’s purchases.
Central banks around the world have printed money to escape the
global financial crisis, sapping investor appetite for dollars and
euros and setting off a scramble for safety.
In
1998, the year Russia defaulted on $40 billion of domestic debt, it
took as many as 28 barrels of crude to buy an ounce of gold,
Bloomberg data show. That ratio tumbled to 11.5 by the time Putin
first came to power a year later and in 2005, after it touched 6.5 --
less than half what it is now -- the president told the central bank
to buy.
During
a tour that November of the Magadan region in the Far East,
where Polyus
Gold International Ltd.
and Polymetal
International Plc have
operations, Putin told Bank Rossii not to “shy away” from the
metal. “After all, they’re called gold and currency reserves for
a reason,” Putin said, according to a Kremlin transcript.
Lucky Guy
At
the time, gold was trading at an 18-year high of $495 an ounce and
the Moscow-based central bank held 387 tons, or 2.2 percent of its
$165 billion total reserves.
The share reached 3.5 percent within a month, according to data
compiled by Bloomberg.
An
ounce of gold for immediate delivery traded at $1,670 as of 7:24 p.m.
Moscow time on Feb. 8. It rose 7 percent last year, the 12th straight
year of gains. Analysts expect the metal to advance again in 2013, to
$1,825 by the end of the year, according to the median of 26
forecasts in a Bloomberg survey.
“Putin’s
gold strategy fits in with his resource nationalism, statist agenda,”
said Tim
Ash,
head of emerging- market research at Standard Bank Plc in London.
“It’s kind of a defensive play, but it worked, right?” Ash said
in an interview in Moscow. “You need luck in politics and business,
and clearly the guy has it.”
Brown’s Bottom
Other
world leaders haven’t been as lucky. Gordon
Brown,
as U.K. finance minister, sold almost 400 tons of gold in the 30
months to March 2002, when prices were at two-decade lows. London
tabloids have referred to the period as Brown’s
Bottom.
Quantitative
easing by major economies to support financial asset prices is
driving demand for gold in the emerging world, said Marcus
Grubb,
head of investment research at the World Gold Council. Before the
crisis, central banks were net sellers of 400 to 500 tons a year.
Now, led by Russia and China, they’re net buyers by about 450 tons,
Grubb said by phone from London, where his industry group is based.
While
Putin is leading the gold rush in emerging markets, developed nations
are liquidating. Switzerland unloaded the most in the past decade,
877 tons, an amount now worth about $48 billion, according to
International Monetary Fund data through November. France was second
with 589 tons, while Spain, the Netherlands and Portugal each sold
more than 200 tons.
Number Eight
Even
after Putin’s binge, though, Russia’s total cache of about 958
tons is only the eighth-largest, the World Gold Council said in a
Feb. 8 report. The U.S. is No. 1 with about 8,134 tons, followed by
Germany with 3,391 tons and the Washington-based IMF with 2,814 tons.
Italy, France, China and Switzerland are fourth through seventh.
While gold accounts for 9.5 percent of Russia’s total reserves, it
accounts for more than 70 percent in the U.S., Germany, Italy and
France.
Russia
keeps about two-thirds of its stockpile in a greenish gray
stone-and-glass building on Ulitsa Pravdy, or Truth Street, in
central Moscow. The street is named after Pravda, the official
newspaper of the Communist Party, which also was headquartered there.
Then-Prime
Minister Putin became the first Russian leader to visit the
complex on
Jan. 24, 2011, according to the government’s website. He toured the
17,000 square-meter facility, which includes 1,500 square meters of
storage, with First Deputy Chairman Georgy
Luntovsky,
posing for photographs lifting
an ingot.
Most of the bars weigh 10 to 14 kilograms (22 to 31 pounds) and are
boxed in plastic or wooden crates alongside an emergency supply of
banknotes.
Bank Buying
Technically,
state metals depositary Gokhran has the exclusive right to buy all
gold mined in the country. In practice, it lets commercial banks buy
from producers directly, usually in the form of project financing,
said Sergey Kashuba, chairman of the Russian Union of Gold Producers
in Moscow.
When
the central bank buys gold, it’s from those commercial banks, led
last year by OAO
Sberbank,
OAO Nomos
Bank,
VTB Group and OAO Gazprombank, Kashuba said. Russia produced 205 tons
of gold last year, making it No. 4 after China, Australia and the
U.S., according to U.S. Geological Survey estimates.
Security
is tight along the entire production chain, Kashuba said. Just two
organizations are allowed to move partially refined gold from miners
in the Far East and northern Siberia to processing facilities in
other parts of the country, he said. One is FeldSvyaz, a courier
service that reports directly to Putin. The other, SpetsSvyaz,
was split off from Stalin’s NKVD secret police in 1939 to transport
precious metals and state secrets, according to its website.
Tsar Purchases
Russia
has gone through bouts of hoarding before. Tsar Alexander II ordered
his government to start amassing bullion in 1867, just months after
selling Alaska, now the No. 2 gold- producing U.S. state, for $7.3
million. His grandson, Nicholas
II,
introduced the gold standard in 1897, then needed a loan from France
to ward off speculators and save the system in 1906.
Nicholas,
Russia’s last tsar was forced to free the ruble in 1914 as war
broke out in Europe. Lenin’s revolutionary government reinstated
the gold link along with a new currency in 1922. While Soviet rubles
were nominally backed by gold, sales of the metal to citizens were
halted in 1930, making the peg meaningless.
When
Lenin’s Bolsheviks seized power in Petrograd, as St. Petersburg was
then known, in 1917, one of their first
targets was
the State Bank and its gold, which they captured at 6 a.m. on Nov. 7,
according to Bank Rossii’s website. They soon nationalized all the
banks, confiscating any gold found in vaults and deposit boxes.
No Hoard
Communist
secrecy regarding the country’s gold holdings fueled speculation
that party elites had amassed a huge hoard of bullion that they
spirited out of the country before the Soviet Union disintegrated in
1991.
Viktor
Gerashchenko,
the last Soviet central banker and a two-time chairman of Bank
Rossii, has repeatedly denied such speculation, including last
February.
“When
people ask about the party’s gold, my answer is always: Are you an
idiot or something?” Gerashchenko, 75, told Afisha
magazine.
For
now, with more than five years left in Putin’s term, Russia plans
to keep on buying.
“The
pace will be determined by the market,” First Deputy
Chairman Alexei
Ulyukayev said
in an interview in Davos, Switzerland, on Jan. 25. “Whether to
speed that up or slow it down is a market decision and I’m not
going to discuss it.”
Russia Flips Petrodollar On Its Head By Exporting Crude, Buying Record Gold
10
Febraury, 2013
China
has been a very active purchaser of gold for its reserves in the last
few years, as we
extensively covered here and here,
but another nation has taken over the 'biggest buyer' role (for
the same reasons as China).
Central
banks around the world have printed money to escape the global
financial crisis, and as Bloomberg
reports,
IMF data shows Russia
added 570 metric tons in the past decade.
Putin's fears that "the
U.S. is endangering the global economy by abusing its dollar
monopoly," are
clearly being taken seriously as the world's largest oil producer
turns black gold into hard assets. A lawmaker in Putin's party
noted, "the
more gold a country has, the more sovereignty it will have if there’s
a cataclysm with the dollar,
the euro, the pound or any other reserve currency."
Putin’s
gold strategy fits in with his resource nationalism, statist agenda,
as Bloomberg notes when Russia defaulted in 1998 it took 28 barrels
of oil to buy one ounce of gold, was 11.5 barrels when
Putin came to power and when in 2005 it had fallen to 6.5 barrels
(less than half what it is now), he went all in, telling the central
bank to buy.
Russia
has gone through bouts of hoarding before - from 1867's Tsar
Alexander II to Lenin, for now, with more than five years left in
Putin’s term, Russia plans to keep on buying - "The
pace will be determined by the market," First
Deputy Chairman Alexei Ulyukayev said in an interview in Davos,
Switzerland, on Jan. 25. "Whether to speed that up or slow it
down is a market decision and I’m not going to discuss it."
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