June 21st, 2010 Posted in Markets
The Financial Times (see hyperlink and clips below) reports that the Saudi Arabian Monetary Agency (SAMA), the Kingdom’s central bank, has disclosed a more than doubling of its gold reserves to 322.9 tons (an increase of US$7 billion at current prices, over its last disclosed level of 143 tons). While the increase may be solely the result of a change to SAMA’s accounting method, the Kingdom possesses more than twice as much gold as previously thought. In recent trading gold has hit unadjusted (for inflation) all-time highs above $1260/ounce. Should sovereign buying of gold continue (India, for instance, has been a big purchaser), and considering that the breaking news of China’s decision to unpeg its currency and thus have a stronger yuan, analysts see more potential upside to gold.
Gold prices hit on Monday a fresh record high of almost $1,265 a troy ounce following the revelation that Saudi Arabia, the world’s largest oil exporter, is sitting on more than twice as much gold as previously thought, according to new estimates. |
The weakness of the dollar following China’s decision to make the yuan more flexible, gave bullion further momentum, analysts said. A stronger yuan makes the cost of gold for Chinese buyer cheaper, potentially increasing demand. China is the world’s second largest gold consumer, after India. It is also the largest producer. |
Analysts said the rise in official gold holdings probably represented an accounting shift rather than fresh purchases. One possibility is that a large fraction of the country’s gold was not considered until now part of the official reserves.
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But without an official explanation, analysts were keeping options open. At current prices, the extra gold in Saudi Arabia’s official reserves amounts to $7bn. |
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