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Marking the Field: US Stated Gold Reserves and Gold Held at the Fed - World Gold and Gold Swaps

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Publié le 20 mai 2013
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The US Treasury says that it holds 261,499,000 fine troy ounces in its international reserves.

The gold is valued on the books at $42.2222 per fine troy ounce. This represents a total value of $11,041,063,078.

Since there are 32,150.7466 troy ounces in a tonne, the US Treasury has 8,133.53 tonnes of fine gold on its books.  Note that the number as presented on a copy of the official US Treasury statement shown below includes 'gold swaps.' 

A discussion of the procedures and nature of gold swaps and loans by the IMF is here.

 
Most of the gold reserves of the US are stored at the US Bullion Depository, also know at Ft. Knox.

Current Report: April 30, 2013


Department of the Treasury
Financial Management Service
STATUS REPORT OF U.S. TREASURY-OWNED GOLD
April 30, 2013

SummaryFine Troy OuncesBook Value
   
Gold Bullion258,641,878.074$10,920,429,098.79
Gold Coins, Blanks, Miscellaneous2,857,048.173120,645,943.46
   
Total261,498,926.24711,041,075,042.25
   
Mint-Held Gold - Deep Storage   
   
  Denver, CO43,853,707.2791,851,599,995.81
  Fort Knox, KY147,341,858.3826,221,097,412.78
  West Point, NY54,067,331.3792,282,841,677.17
Subtotal - Deep Storage Gold245,262,897.04010,355,539,085.76
   
Mint-Held Treasury Gold - Working Stock   
  All locations - Coins, blanks, miscellaneous 2,783,218.656117,513,614.74
Subtotal - Working Stock Gold 2,783,218.656117,513,614.74
   
Grand Total - Mint-Held Gold248,046,115.69610,473,052,700.50
   
Federal Reserve Bank-Held Gold  
   
Gold Bullion:  
  Federal Reserve Banks - NY Vault13,376,987.715564,805,850.63
  Federal Reserve Banks - display1,993.31984,162.40
Subtotal - Gold Bullion13,378,981.034564,890,013.03
   
Gold Coins:  
  Federal Reserve Banks - NY Vault73,452.0663,116,391.91
  Federal Reserve Banks - display377.45115,936.81
Subtotal - Gold Coins73,829.5173,132.328.72
   
Total - Federal Reserve Bank-Held Gold13,452,810.551568,022,341.75
   
Total - Treasury-Owned Gold261,498,926.247$11,041,075,042.25
   

Deep Storage: Deep-Storage gold is the portion of the U.S. government-owned Gold Bullion Reserve that the U.S. Mint secures in sealed vaults, which are examined annually by the Department of Treasury's Office of the Inspector General. Deep-Storage gold comprises the vast majority of the Reserve and consists primarily of gold bars. This portion was formerly called "Bullion Reserve" or "Custodial Gold Bullion Reserve."

Working Stock: Working-Stock gold is the portion of the U.S. government-owned Gold Bullion Reserve that the U.S. Mint uses as the raw material for minting congressionally authorized coins. Working-Stock gold comprises only about 1 percent of the Reserve and consists of bars, blanks, unsold coins, and condemned coins. This portion was formerly listed as individual coins and blanks or called "PEF Gold."

 Last Updated:  March 21, 2013

According to the September 30, 2012 audit, the Federal Reserve holds 13,452,810.532 fine Troy ounces (FTO) of gold bullion in its vaults, almost all at the Federal Reserve Bank of NY. 

This is 418.43 tonnes.

The gold belongs to the US Treasury. The Fed owns no gold.

The Federal Reserve Bank of New York is said to hold approximately 7,000 tonnes of gold in its vaults, most of it in custody for foreign governments and banks, and international institutions.

Below is the September 2012 accounting of the Treasury gold held in vaults and on display at the Federal Reserve banks.

 United States gold reserves held by Federal Reserve Banks consisted of the following at September 30, 2012: Statutory Value at $42.222 per FTO

Market Value At September 30, 2012, the market value of gold per the London Gold Fixing (PM) was $1,776.00 per FTO.
Gold Bars 13,378,981.032  FTO $ 564,890,013 $ 23,761,070,313
Gold Coins 73,829.500 FTO 3,117,244 131,121,192
Total 13,452,810.532 FTO $ 568,007,257 $ 23,892,191,505

"The Federal Reserve Bank of New York holds 99.98% of the total United States-owned gold bars and coins held by FRBs within its vault. The remaining 0.02% of the United States-owned gold bars and coins held by FRBs are on display at the Federal Reserve Banks of Richmond, Atlanta, Kansas City, Minneapolis, San Francisco, New York and Dallas."

The Fed does hold gold certificates on its books.   They were given in exchange for the transfer of gold held by the Fed to the US Treasury in 1934.

With regard to the Fed's Gold Certificates here is some history by way of explanation:

Acting under this authority [the Emergency Banking Act of March 9, 1933], the secretary of the Treasury issued orders dated December 28, 1933, and January 15, 1934, the latter requiring all gold coin, gold bullion, and gold certificates to be delivered to the Treasurer of the United States on or before January 17, 1934.

A new type of gold certificate, series of 1934, in denominations of $100, $1,000, $10,000, and $100,000, was issued only to Federal Reserve banks against certain credits established with the Treasurer of the United States. These certificates are not paid out by Federal Reserve banks and do not appear in circulation. They bear on their face the wording: "This is to certify that there is on deposit in the Treasury of the United States of America dollars in gold, payable to bearer on demand as authorized by law."

Gold certificates, however, have not been printed since January, 1935. Under the Gold Reserve Act of January 30, 1934, all gold held by the Federal Reserve banks was transferred to the U.S. Treasury, in accordance with Presidential Proclamation of January 31, 1934, the former receiving the gold certificate credits on the books of the Treasury at the former statutory price for gold $20.67 per ounce.

Gold assets were valued at $35 per fine troy ounce, giving effect to the devaluation January 31, 1934, until May 8, 1972, when they were revalued at $38 pursuant to the Par Value Modification Act, P.L. 92-268, approved March 31, 1972. The increment amounted to $822 million.

Gold assets were subsequently revalued at $42.22 pursuant to the amendment of Section 2 of the Par Value Modification Act, P.L. 93-110, approved September 21, 1973. This increment amounted to $1,157 million. All of the U.S. Treasury's monetary gold stock valuation, including the preceding revaluation increments, has been monetized by the U.S. Treasury by the issuance to the Federal Reserve banks of $11,160,104,000 for their gold certificate account (total as of close of 1980). In addition, the U.S. Treasury monetized $2,518 million (as of close of 1980) of the U.S. special drawing rights by issuance to the Federal Reserve banks for their special drawing rights certificate account.

On the books of the Federal Reserve banks, neither the gold certificate account nor the special drawing rights certificate account plays any restrictive role in Federal Reserve banks' operations. With the U.S. losing monetary gold in recent years of balance-of-payments deficits, causing decline in gold certificates (credits), two restraints were eliminated: P.L. 89-3, March 3, 1965, eliminated the requirement contained in Section 16 of the Federal Reserve Act for the maintenance of reserves in gold certificates by Federal Reserve banks of not less than 25% against Federal Reserve bank deposit liabilities; and P.L. 90-269, March 18, 1968, eliminated the remaining provision in Section 16 of the Federal Reserve Act under which the Federal Reserve banks were required to maintain reserves in gold certificates of not less than 25% against Federal Reserve notes.

Gold certificates (credits) held by the individual 12 Federal Reserve banks, therefore, merely reflect the total of monetary gold held by the U.S. and also the individual Federal Reserve bank holdings of gold certificates (credits) to their credit on the books of the INTER-DISTRICT SETTLEMENT ACCOUNT.

Nevertheless, both the gold certificate account and special drawing rights account at Federal Reserve banks were utilized as eligible assets to serve as part of the 100% collateral pledged with the Federal Reserve agent at each Federal Reserve bank for issues of Federal Reserve notes. (The Depository Institutions Deregulation And Monetary Control Act Of 1980 removed the collateral requirements for Federal Reserve notes held in the vaults of Federal Reserve banks.)

Encyclopedia of Banking & Finance (9th Edition) by Charles J Woelfel
There has been much speculation provoked primarily by GATA that the Fed has engaged in gold swaps on behalf of the Treasury.  Some of this was sparked by a reference to 'gold swaps' in FOMC minutes.  

There is some thinking that gold owned by other countries and held in custody by the Fed has been 're-hypothecated' in gold swaps and leases to bullion banks and sold into the private marketplace.   And there is some thinking that the gold has been used as collateral in multiples as is the current fashion in financial circles.

A request under the Freedom of Information Act provided some documents, and a denial of information for certain 'intra-agency documents' as cited in this letter from the Fed here.
The letter, dated September 17 and written by Federal Reserve Board member Kevin M. Warsh (see http://www.federalreserve.gov/aboutthefed/bio...board/warsh.htm), formerly a member of the President's Working Group on Financial Markets, detailed the Fed's position that the gold swap records sought by GATA are exempt from disclosure under the U.S. Freedom of Information Act.

Warsh wrote in part: "In connection with your appeal, I have confirmed that the information withheld under Exemption 4 consists of confidential commercial or financial information relating to the operations of the Federal Reserve Banks that was obtained within the meaning of Exemption 4. This includes information relating to swap arrangements with foreign banks on behalf of the Federal Reserve System and is not the type of information that is customarily disclosed to the public. This information was properly withheld from you."

When, in 2001, GATA discovered a reference to gold swaps in the minutes of the January 31-February 1, 1995, meeting of the Federal Reserve's Federal Open Market Committee and pressed the Fed, through two U.S. senators, for an explanation, Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan denied that the Fed was involved in gold swaps in any way. Greenspan also produced a memorandum written by the Fed official who had been quoted about gold swaps in the FOMC minutes, FOMC General Counsel J. Virgil Mattingly, in which Mattingly denied making any such comments. (See target="_blank" http://www.gata.org/node/1181.)

The Fed's September 17 letter to GATA confirming that the Fed has gold swap arrangements can be found here:
target="_blank" http://www.gata.org/files/GATAFedResponse-09-17-2009.pdf

Here is the distribution of the stated reserves of world gold.

As of December 2012 (Top 40 based on World Gold Council data)[9]
RankCountry/OrganizationGold
(tonnes)
Gold's share
of national
target="_blank" forex reserves (%)
1 United States8,133.576%
2 Germany3,391.373%
3 target="_blank" International Monetary Fund2,814.0N.A.
4 Italy2,451.872%
5 France2,435.471%
6 China1,054.12%
7 Switzerland1,040.111%
8 Russia976.9[10]9%
9 Japan765.23%
10 Netherlands612.560%
11 India557.710%
12 target="_blank" European Central Bank502.133%
13 Taiwan423.66%
14 Portugal382.590%
15 Turkey375.7[10]16%
16 Venezuela365.875%
17 Saudi Arabia322.93%
18 United Kingdom310.316%
19 Lebanon286.829%
20 Spain281.630%
21 Austria280.055.0%
22 Belgium227.539%
23 Philippines192.712%
24 Algeria173.65%
25 Thailand152.44%
26 Singapore127.43%
27 Sweden125.713%
28 South Africa125.113%
29 Mexico124.54%
30 Libya116.65%
31 target="_blank" Bank for International Settlements116.0N.A.
32 Kazakhstan115.322%
33 Greece111.982%
34 Romania103.712%
35 Poland102.95%
36 South Korea84.41%
37 Australia79.99%
38 Kuwait79.013%
39 Egypt75.625%
40 Indonesia73.14%
41 target="_blank" Kingdom of Denmark66.54.1%
42 target="_blank" Islamic Republic of Pakistan64.418.9%
43 target="_blank" Argentine Republic54.76.4%
44 target="_blank" Federative Republic of Brazil52.50.5%
45 target="_blank" Plurinational State of Bolivia49.322.9%
46 target="_blank" Republic of Finland49.124.6%
47 target="_blank" Republic of Bulgaria39.912.0%
48 target="_blank" Republic of Belarus38.541.4%
49West African Economic and Monetary Union36.512.9%
50 target="_blank" Malaysia36.41.5%
51 target="_blank" Ukraine35.24.9%
52 target="_blank" Republic of Peru34.74.0%
53 target="_blank" Slovakia31.867.6%
54 target="_blank" Ecuador26.332.0%
55 target="_blank" Syrian Arab Republic25.87.9%
56 target="_blank" Kingdom of Morocco22.05.6%
57 target="_blank" Federal Republic of Nigeria21.43.2%
58 target="_blank" Republic of Serbia14.15.1%
59 target="_blank" Republic of Cyprus13.958.3%
60 target="_blank" People's Republic of Bangladesh13.57.5%
61 target="_blank" Netherlands Antilles13.136.3%
62 target="_blank" Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan12.85.5%
63 target="_blank" Czech Republic12.51.6%
64 target="_blank" State of Qatar12.44.4%
65 target="_blank" Kingdom of Cambodia12.416.6%
66 target="_blank" Republic of Colombia10.41.8%
67 target="_blank" Lao People's Democratic Republic8.836.5%
68 target="_blank" Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka8.15.3%
69 target="_blank" Republic of Latvia7.705.5%
70 target="_blank" Republic of El Salvador7.314.6%
71 target="_blank" Republic of Guatemala6.95.8%
72 target="_blank" Republic of Macedonia6.814.8%
73 target="_blank" Tunisian Republic6.74.5%
74 target="_blank" Ireland6.015.1%
75 target="_blank" Federal Democratic Republic of Nepal6.0 [11]
76 target="_blank" Republic of Lithuania5.804.1%
77 target="_blank" Kingdom of Bahrain4.7
78 target="_blank" Republic of Tajikistan4.4
79 target="_blank" Republic of Mauritius3.906.5%
80 target="_blank" Canada3.40.3%
81 target="_blank" Republic of Slovenia3.215.8%
82 target="_blank" Aruba3.124.2%
83 target="_blank" Hungary3.10.3%
84 target="_blank" Kyrgyz Republic2.67.5%
85 target="_blank" Mongolia2.34.8%
86 target="_blank" Grand Duchy of Luxembourg2.210.6%
87 target="_blank" Republic of Suriname2.213.1%
88 target="_blank" Hong Kong Special Administrative Region2.10.0%
89 target="_blank" Republic of Iceland2.001.3%
90 target="_blank" Independent State of Papua New Guinea2.02.8%
91 target="_blank" Republic of Trinidad and Tobago1.91.1%
92 target="_blank" Republic of Albania1.63.4%
93 target="_blank" Republic of Yemen1.61.8%
94 target="_blank" Republic of Cameroon0.91.2%
95 target="_blank" Republic of Honduras0.71.4%
96 target="_blank" Republic of Paraguay0.70.7%
97 target="_blank" Dominican Republic0.61.1%
98 target="_blank" Gabonese Republic0.40.8%
99 target="_blank" Republic of Malawi0.48.9%
100 target="_blank" Central African Republic0.38.4%
101 target="_blank" Republic of Chad0.32.4%
102 target="_blank" Republic of the Congo0.30.4%
103 target="_blank" Oriental Republic of Uruguay0.30.1%
104 target="_blank" Republic of Fiji0.20.0%
105 target="_blank" Republic of Estonia0.26.0%
106 target="_blank" Republic of Chile0.20.0%
107 target="_blank" Republic of Malta0.21.6%
108 target="_blank" Republic of Costa Rica0.10.1%
109 target="_blank" Republic of Haiti0.00.1%
-

Données et statistiques pour les pays mentionnés : Costa Rica | France | Guatemala | Haiti | Honduras | Hong Kong | Kazakhstan | Luxembourg | Malawi | Nigeria | Pakistan | Paraguay | Philippines | Portugal | Suriname | Ukraine | Uruguay | Venezuela | Yemen | Tous
Cours de l'or et de l'argent pour les pays mentionnés : Costa Rica | France | Guatemala | Haiti | Honduras | Hong Kong | Kazakhstan | Luxembourg | Malawi | Nigeria | Pakistan | Paraguay | Philippines | Portugal | Suriname | Ukraine | Uruguay | Venezuela | Yemen | Tous
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Yah, yah, yah. Let's cut to the chase. 8133.5 tons at $1350 is about $260 billion. This is 76% of reserves so the total reserves are about $340 billion.
This is the "payment of last resort" stash.

Now run the same math for Russia or Switzerland. Then look at China's figures and remember how much in US T-notes China holds.
Should I mention the same about Japan?

Do you really think this will turn out well?

If I haven't depressed you enough already, consider the delaying tactics for repatriating Germany's gold. Part of their "payment of last resort" stash.

And don't you go blaming the bankers for this. Congress and POTUS enacted the laws that allowed, and in some cases forced, the bankers to do what they do. The bankers did NOT run up the national debt. Just like the bankers did NOT max out your credit card.

So how's that international "balance of payments" thingy working out?
Dernier commentaire publié pour cet article
Yah, yah, yah. Let's cut to the chase. 8133.5 tons at $1350 is about $260 billion. This is 76% of reserves so the total reserves are about $340 billion. This is the "payment of last resort" stash. Now run the same math for Russia or Switzerland. Then l  Lire la suite
overtheedge - 19/05/2013 à 05:55 GMT
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