Central
Banking with “Other People’s Gold”: A Multi-billion Treasure
Trove in Lower Manhattan
Prof.
Michel Chossudovsky
26
April, 2013
Germany
is repatriating its gold reserves from the New York Federal Reserve.
This decision has created a frenzy in the gold market. But that is
just the tip of the iceberg.
According
to the NY Fed, there are (2012) approximately 530,000 gold bars, with
a combined weight of circa 6,700 metric tonnes stashed away in the
Fed’s Lower Manhattan vaults.
These
are official figures which are impossible to verify.
The gold is stored in the fifth sub-floor of the New York Fed building on Liberty Street. The vaults on the bedrock of Manhattan Island are located 80 feet below street level.
The gold is stored in the fifth sub-floor of the New York Fed building on Liberty Street. The vaults on the bedrock of Manhattan Island are located 80 feet below street level.
Each
of the 530,000 gold bars weighs 400 troy ounces, or about 12.44kg.
At
today’s market value of approximately US$1700 dollars a troy ounce,
the New York Fed has within its vaults a multi-billion dollar
treasure trove.
The
400-ounce gold bar is quoted at $677,640.
A
1kg gold bar is quoted at about $55,000. (purchase price)
Each
metric tonne of gold is worth approximately $55 million.
The
total value of the New York Federal Reserve’s gold bullion trove of
6700 tonnes is a staggering $368.5 billion.
But
according to the New York Federal Reserve: “We do not own the gold.
We are mere custodians.”
A
wall of gold bricks in the globally owned collection at the Federal
Reserve Bank of New York. (Photo courtesy of the New York Fed’s
press center)
The
gold is in “safe-keeping” on behalf of more than 60 sovereign
countries and a few organizations. Close to 98 per cent of the gold
bullion stored in the NY Fed’s lower Manhattan vaults, according to
the Fed, belongs to central banks of foreign countries.
The
remaining 2 per cent “is owned by the United States and
international organizations such as the IMF.”
Germany’s
central bank owns a total of 3400 tonnes of gold. According to recent
reports, a staggering 69 per cent of its gold bullion bars (namely
2346 tonnes) are held in custody at the New York Federal Reserve, the
Bank of England and the Banque de France.
The
NY Federal Reserve Bank holds in custody 1536 metric tonnes of gold
owned by the Bundesbank of the Federal Republic of Germany, 22.9 per
cent of its total gold holdings in custody (6700 tonnes).
The
Bundesbank has
announced
that it will repatriate “all
of its 374 metric tonnes stored at the Banque de France (11 per cent
of its total reserves), and 300 metric tonnes held in the vault of
the New York Fed, reducing its share in the US from 45 per cent to 37
per cent.”
.
Two
other European countries, namely Italy and the Netherlands, have
significant yet undisclosed gold bullion reserves held in custody in
the vaults of the NY Federal Reserve Bank. There are no immediate
plans to repatriate this bullion.
While
the NY Federal Reserve Bank does not actually own the gold, it is
guardian of a multibillion-dollar gold treasure, which indelibly
provides ‘collateral’ (at virtually no cost) as well as
‘leverage’ in its multibillion-dollar central banking operations,
often at the expense of its European partners.
The
New York Fed’s gold vault on the basement floor of its main office
building in Manhattan provides account holders with a secure location
to store their monetary gold reserves.
None
of the gold stored in the vault belongs to the New York Fed or the
Federal Reserve System. The New York Fed acts as the guardian and
custodian of the gold riches on behalf of account holders, which
include the US government, foreign governments, other central banks
and official international organizations.
In
other words, the Fed runs its operation ‘with other people’s
gold’, using this huge treasure as ‘collateral’ to back its
various financial undertakings.
Foreign
countries around the world were pressured after World War II into
depositing their gold reserves, not within the vaults of their own
central banks, but in that of the world’s foremost imperial power.
A
view of the strongroom of the Swiss National Bank SNB in Berne.
(Reuters)
According
to the NY Federal Reserve:
“Much
of the gold in the vault arrived during and after World War II as
many countries wanted to store their gold reserves in a safe
location. Holdings in the gold vault continued to increase and peaked
in 1973, shortly after the United States suspended convertibility of
dollars into gold for foreign governments.” (emphasis added)
For
many countries, part of the US dollar proceeds of commodities sold to
the US, were converted into gold at 32 dollars an ounce (1946-71) and
then ‘returned’ – so to speak – to the US for deposit in the
vaults of the NY Federal Reserve.
Germany’s
decision to repatriate part of its gold has sent a cold shiver into
the gold and forex markets.
The
German Federal Court of Auditors has recently called for an official
inspection of German gold reserves stored at the New York Federal
Reserve, “because
they have never been fully checked.”
Are
these German bullion reserves held in the vaults of Lower Manhattan
‘separate’ or are they part of the Federal Reserve’s fungible
‘big pot’ of gold assets.
According
to the Fed, “the
gold is not commingled between account holders.”
Does
the New York Federal Reserve Bank have
“Fungible Gold Assets to the Degree Claimed”?
Could
the Fed reasonably handle a process of homeland repatriation of gold
assets initiated by several countries simultaneously?
According
to the Fed, there are 122 separate gold accounts mainly held by the
central banks of foreign countries, as well as a few organizations
including the International Monetary Fund.
Following
the verification process, the gold is moved to one of the vault’s
122 compartments, where each compartment contains gold held by a
single account holder. In rare cases, small deposits are placed on
separately numbered spaces on shelves in a ‘library’ compartment
shared by several account holders. Each compartment is secured by a
padlock, two combination locks and an auditor’s seal. Compartments
are numbered rather than named to maintain confidentiality of the
account holders.
The
New York Fed does not indicate in any of its reports, including its
annual financial statements, the names of the countries and account
holders.
Most
of the 122 accounts are held by the central banks of sovereign
countries, which in addition to their gold accounts have statutory
agreements with the NY Federal Reserve.
An
employee of Deutsche Bundesbank uses a metal analysis device on a
gold bar. (Reuters / Lisi Niesner)
Money
and National sovereignty
America’s
Unipolar World hinges on sustaining the US dollar as a global reserve
currency. US hegemony in monetary matters is supported by the custody
in the USA of gold bullion reserves on behalf of more than 60
countries.
Instead
of gold bullion, national central banks (with the exception of the
US) hold US dollar paper instruments as ‘reserves’. Gold reserves
under national jurisdiction are central to establishing sovereignty
in monetary policy, without depending on the Federal Reserve which
holds a nation’s gold bullion in safe-keeping in its Lower
Manhattan vault.
National
sovereignty requires the repatriation of the gold bullion deposited
in custody with the NY Fed. The leverage and collateral in all
monetary transactions largely accrues to the NY Federal Reserve Bank
rather than to the owners of the bullion deposited in custody.
Follow
the example of Germany. Repatriate your gold.
In
a related development, both China and Russia are dumping their US
dollars and building up their gold reserves.
In
turn, both China and Russia have boosted domestic production of gold,
a large share of which is being purchased by their central banks.
Michel
Chossudovsky for RT
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