Based on the title, you’re probably groaning: ‘Wait, I thought this
was supposed to be a forex blog?” Bear with me, however, as this subject
is extremely pertinent to forex.
Last week, it was revealed that China has been clandestinely adding
to its gold reserves since 2003, to the extent that its holdings
increased by 76%, to approximately 1,050 tons. The news initially sent a
ripple
through forex and commodities markets, which were overwhelmed by
the figures involved. After analysts had a chance to gather some
perspective, however, the markets relaxed. You see, although the
increase seems tremendous in size, it is quite small in relative terms.
It is relatively small compared to other countries: “This places China fifth in the world,
ahead of Switzerland’s 1040 tons but behind the U.S. ranked first with
8,133 tons, followed by Germany (3,412 tons), France (2,508 tons) and
Italy (2,451 tons).”
It is relatively small given the six-year duration of accumulation: “I think as soon as people realized it’s not a year-on-year increase, or a quarter-on-quarter increase, people realized it should not have that big an impact.”
It is small relative to China’s mammoth $2 Trillion forex reserves: “As a proportion of foreign exchange reserves, which have risen five-fold over the same period, gold now stands at a tiny 1.6 percent, versus 1.7 percent in 2003.”
On some level, the development has at least some symbolic importance,
as it demonstrates that it cannot be taken for granted that China will
simply continue to plow its (dwindling) trade surplus into
Dollar-denominated securities, or even currencies in general. This is
underscored by the suspicious timing of the announcement; China
essentially waited six years before revealing its buildup in gold,
probably in order to coincide with the uproar surrounding the Dollar’s
role as global reserve currency. In other words, even though China’s
gold purchases in and of themselves don’t amount to much, the Central
Bank of China is trying to send a message that it will defend itself
against “the depreciation risk of some foreign currencies.”
The announcement also explains the recent buoyancy of gold prices.
Historically, there existed an inverse correlation between gold and the
Dollar. This correlation has all but broken down as a result of the
credit crisis, and for the first time a strong Dollar has been
accompanied by high gold prices. Part of the reason may be increased
buying activity by Central Banks, including the Bank of China: “The
physical market remained well-bid by an unknown buyer
despite bullion prices spiking to levels that normally cooled
demand…Purchases were made in Shanghai, traders said, in an effort to
absorb domestic production and lessen the impact of bullion prices on
global markets.”
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