Russia’s central bank bought about 150 metric tons of the metal this
year, announced Governor Elvira Nabiullina yesterday. The pronouncement
immediately created buying in the market, prompting gold to rise to a two
week high at $1,200 an ounce.
Head of Russian Central Bank
Elvira Nabiullina -Jr/Bloomberg
Russia's central bank Governor Elvira Nabiullina told the lower house
of parliament about the significant Russian gold purchases. She is an
economist, head of the Central Bank of Russia and was Vladimir Putin's
economic adviser between May 2012 to June 2013.
This announcement is unusual and to our knowledge has not happened
before. The announcement by the Russian central bank governor was likely
coordinated with Putin and the Kremlin and designed to signal how Russia
views their gold reserves as a potential geopolitical and indeed financial
and currency war weapon.
Gold currently constitutes for around 10% of the bank's gold and
forex reserves, she added. Official purchases were about 77 tons in 2013,
International Monetary Fund data show.
MARKET UPDATE
Today’s AM fix was USD 1,200.75, EUR 957.61 and GBP 766.08 per ounce.
Yesterday’s AM fix was USD 1,202.00, EUR 959.68 and GBP 767.81 per ounce.
Gold climbed $10.40 or
0.88% to $1,196.80/oz yesterday. Silver rose $0.06 or 0.37% to $16.22/oz.
Gold remained firm at $1,200 an ounce as the market digested very robust
Russian central bank demand and announcement and await next week's Swiss gold
referendum and later today, the U.S. Federal Reserve minutes at 1900 GMT.
If the Fed increases interest rates it could hurt
non-interest-bearing gold in the short term. However rising interesting rates
are more bearish for stocks and bonds as was seen in the rising interest
period of the 1970s when gold prices surged.
The Swiss gold referendum is around the corner on November 30th and
if passed this could force the Swiss National Bank to keep 20% of its
holdings in gold bullion, force the SNB to repatriate gold holdings and end
all gold sales.
The dollar hit a seven-year high against the yen today. Silver was up
0.5% at $16.24 an ounce. Spot platinum was up 0.5% at $1,206.65 an
ounce, while spot palladium was flat at $769.98 an ounce.
Shares fell in Europe and Asia on Wednesday while the dollar rose
broadly, hitting a new seven-year high against the yen, as investor
nervousness on the diverging outlooks for the world's major economies.
The dip in gold prices has spurred purchases from Asia. Trading
volumes on the Shanghai Gold Exchange’s (SGE) benchmark bullion spot contract
jumped this week and India’s imports surged in October.
Russian President Vladimir Putin
holds a gold bar while visiting an exhibition at Russia's Far Eastern gold
mining center of Magadan November 22, 2005. Putin on Tuesday supported the
idea of boosting the share of gold in Russia's central bank reserves, which
are the largest of any country outside Asia. (Photo:
REUTERS/ITAR-TASS/PRESIDENTIAL/)
The International Monetary Fund said the latest figures showed an
almost double jump over the country's registered purchases of 77 tonnes in
2013. It said that historically, Russia started buying gold again since the
end of September, perhaps at an initial 35 tonnes.
Nabiullina, who said the bank's total foreign reserves is made up 10
percent of gold, likewise told the Russian parliament on Tuesday there is no
need to place restrictions on gold exports. A number of lawmakers had
proposed to put a moratorium on the exports of the safe haven yellow metal so
the country would be able to secure enough gold amid the sanctions it is
experiencing.
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