Thursday, October 25, 2012

Germany’s Bundesbank Consolidates Gold Holdings

Possibly in response to German’s federal authorities call for the audit the gold holdings of their central bank, the Bundesbank—which has the second largest after the US of nearly 3,400 tonnes (valued at 133 billion euros $174 billion) held at foreign central banks, particularly at the vaults at Federal Reserve Bank of New York, the Banque France and the England—has begun to redeem them, despite their disagreements with the Feds.

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Writes Telegraph’s Ambrose Evans Pritchard 
Roughly 66pc is held at the New York Federal Reserve, 21pc at the Bank of England, and 8pc at the Bank of France. The German Court of Auditors told legislators in a redacted report that the gold had "never been verified physically" and ordered the Bundesbank to secure access to the storage sites.

It called for repatriation of 150 tons over the next three years to test the quality and weight of the gold bars. It said Frankfurt has no register of numbered gold bars.

The report also claimed that the Bundesbank had slashed its holdings in London from 1,440 tons to 500 tons in 2000 and 2001, allegedly because storage costs were too high. The metal was flown to Frankfurt by air freight.
Has German’s federal government smelled something fishy? Or have they been influenced by the concerns of US Texas Congressman Ron Paul whom has urged, through a bill, for the audit of the US Federal Reserve’s gold?

What if central bank vaults have indeed over-declared their holdings through accounting wizardry? What if central bankers have used of gold for loans, swaps and repurchase agreement partly to control or manipulate or suppress gold prices?

If the suspicions of gold bugs are exposed as true, will the German “audit” prompt for a wider international or domino effect of gold audits that would force central banks, who could have been naked short on gold, to cover or buy them back which should drive gold prices significantly higher?

Or will this be just another white wash? Thus, perhaps the recent price pressures on gold?

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Or by securing their gold holdings, have German federal authorities been dabbling with the prospects of an eventual departure from the euro?

More questions than answers from such interesting turn of events.

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