Submitted by Tyler Durden: There are those who say gold may go to $10,000
or to $0, or somewhere in between; in a different universe, they would
be the people furiously staring at the trees. For a quick look at the
forest, we suggest readers have a glance at the chart below. It shows
that just in the first five months of 2012 alone, China has
imported more gold, a total of 315 tons, than all the official gold
holdings of the UK, at 310.3 according to the WGC/IMF (a country which infamously sold 400 tons of gold by Gordon Brown at ~$275/ounce).
As for the UK (from the WGC):
From Bloomberg:
In May, imports by China from Hong Kong jumped sixfold to 75,635.7 kilograms (75.6 metric tons) from a year earlier, Hong Kong government data showed. The nation “remains the most important player on the global gold market,” Commerzbank AG said in a report. The dollar fell from a five-week high against a basket of currencies, boosting the appeal of the metal as an alternative investment.
“Higher physical demand in China is good news for the market,” Sterling Smith, a commodity analyst at Citigroup Inc.’s institutional client group in Chicago, said in a telephone interview. “The mildly weak dollar is also positive.”
The World Gold Council has forecast that China will top India this year as the world’s largest consumer because rising incomes will bolster demand.
And those looking at the trees will still intone "but, but, gold is
under $1,600" - yes it is. And count your lucky stars. Because while all
of the above is happening, Iran and Turkey have quietly started
unwinding the petrodollar hegemony. From the FT:
According to data released by the Turkish Statistical Institute (TurkStat), Turkey’s trade with Iran in May rose a whopping 513.2 per cent to hit $1.7bn. Of this, gold exports to its eastern neighbour accounted for the bulk of the increase. Nearly $1.4bn worth of gold was exported to Iran, accounting for 84 per cent of Turkey’s trade with the country.
So what’s going on?
In a nutshell – sanctions and oil.
With Tehran struggling to repatriate the hard currency it earns from crude oil exports – its main foreign currency earner and the economic lifeblood of the country - Iran has began accepting alternative means of payments – including gold, renminbi and rupees, for oil in an attempt to skirt international sanctions and pay for its soaring food costs.
“Iran is very keen to increase the share of gold in its total reserves,” says Gokhan Aksu, vice chairman of Istanbul Gold Refinery, one of Turkey’s biggest gold firms. “You can always transfer gold into cash without losing value.”
Turkey’s gold exports to Iran are part of the picture. As TurkStat itself noted, the gold exports were for “non-monetary purpose exportation”. Translation: they were sent in place of dollars for oil.
Iran furnishes about 40 percent of Turkey’s oil, making it the largest single supplier, according to Turkey’s energy ministry. While Turkey has sharply reduced its oil imports from Iran as a result of pressure from the US and the EU, it is unlikely to cut this to zero. The country pays about $6 a barrel less for Iranian oil than Brent crude, according to a recent Goldman Sachs report.
According to Ugur Gurses, an economic and financial columnist for the Turkish daily Radikal, Turkey exported 58 tonnes of gold to Iran between March and May this year alone.
And here is the punchline: if Iran is getting gold in exchange for
products, that means that someone else is demanding Iran's gold in
exchange for other products. But we won't read about it until those
"others" decide to issue a press release.
In other words, the anti-dollar trade is now alive and well, and Iran
has been happily transacting in a dollar-free vacuum since the March
SWIFT embargo. Most likely "buyers" of Iran's gold? The usual suspects
of course: China, Russia, (both of whom recently established bilateral
trade relations with the country just for that purpose, here and here) and India.
So: is gold fairly valued at $1,000, at $1,600 or at $10,000... Or is
that question even relevant any more as the part of the world that is not broke is quietly shifting to its as its default currency?
No comments:
Post a Comment