
Image: Wikimedia
This might explain, in part, the lack of a floor underneath gold prices right now.
Central banks, which had been building up their positions, are now dumping it.
WSJ:
A little-noticed data point at the back of a 216-page report released last week by the BIS shows the international agency has taken 349 metric tons of gold since December—allowing central banks to raise a record $14 billion.
The number surprised the market, which had assumed most central banks had retained their holdings of gold. Instead, the BIS data show that they have been entering these gold swaps—exchanging their gold with the BIS in return for cash, agreeing to repurchase the gold at a later date.
As the article notes, this has been going on for awhile, and these transactions don’t directly impact the open gold market, as it’s not as though this is gold just flooding the market.
Still, it signals a shift. It also signals a broader setback, perhaps, for advocates of gold-backed, hard currency.
The bottom line is that central banks still want flexibility, even if that means potentially-debased “paper” currencies.
Gold obviously has its rule, but in crunch time, and at the right price, it also gets sold.
Related posts:
- Central Banks are Acquiring Gold, Dumping US Dollars
- Central Banks Buying Gold At Record Pace
- Mexican Central Bank Quietly Buys 100 Tons of Gold
- If It Is Time To Sell Gold Then Why Are Central Banks Hoarding Gold Like Crazy?
- Central Banks Purchase 127 Tons Of Gold
- The Dutch Ask Their Central Bank: “Where Is Our Gold?”

