Bank of England Gold – the Doubts Remain
by Alasdair Macleod
GoldMoney.com
Previously
by Alasdair Macleod: Gold
Reserve Mysteries
Last week I
wrote about the mess the Bundesbank has found itself in over its
gold bullion. But they are not alone: the Dutch, Austrian, Mexican
and now even the Swedish central banks are also coming under public
pressure to explain themselves and to repatriate their gold.
The question
that is central to the blind trust placed by central banks in the
Bank of England and the Federal Reserve Board is whether or not
this trust has been abused. There appear to be no audits; lessees
have sold unrecorded gold into the markets; and there is evidence
of outright sales using gold swaps and sight accounts (a sight account
does not require physical gold to back it). With this in mind we
can make a stab at quantifying the deception (if it exists), starting
with the table below.

The table assumes
that China, Russia and the other Asian states within their sphere
of influence hold no gold in London or New York, because their actions
are diametrically opposed to attempts to keep a lid on the price.
Furthermore, they have very different geopolitical priorities, ruling
out any trust-based monetary relationships with the West. Venezuela
took her gold back last year. Otherwise it is assumed all central
banks operate within the normal central banking framework.
Our objective
is to establish whether the 5,738 tonnes of gold held by the Bank
of England is reasonable. The figures in the table include the gold
custody figures reported by the Bank of England in its last Annual
Report, IMF-reported holdings of individual countries and the Federal
Reserve Boards International Summary Statistics (Page 3 for
earmarked gold). The unknowns are broadly three:
- I can find
no evidence of gold sight accounts in New York, but given the
physical market is in London this is perhaps not surprising. It
is assumed in the table that all the US and earmarked gold actually
exists and none is held in London.
- Custody
at the Bank of England includes bullion held for both central
and bullion banks, and there is no breakdown given. Central bank
holdings will therefore be less than the 5,738 tonnes stated.
- We can only
make an educated guess at the how much central bank bullion is
held either in countries of ownership or at other central bank
depositories.
To establish
the level of central bank reserves held in London we should note
disclosures to date. Mexico says she has nearly 95% of her gold
in London and only 1% in New York. Austria has 80% of her gold in
London. But Holland, echoing Germany (13%) says she has only 18%
in the UK.
However, the
remaining non-aligned countries that have added to their bullion
holdings over the years will have done so in London, and for historical
reasons member-nations of the Commonwealth can be expected to have
nearly all their gold in London, and for most countries keeping
gold reserves in London is safer than in their home capitals.
This suggests
that the amount of gold held by the Bank of England should be significantly
greater than the 5,738 tonnes declared, particularly when bullion
bank deposits within that total are accounted for. And if Austrias
80% in London is anything to go by, despite the obvious convenience
of the rival Zurich market on her doorstep, the custody figure should
be closer to 11,500 tonnes.
Reprinted
with permission from GoldMoney.com.
January
29, 2013
Alasdair
Macleod runs FinanceAndEconomics.org,
a website dedicated to sound money and demystifying finance and
economics. Alasdair has a background as a stockbroker, banker and
economist. He is a Senior Fellow at the GoldMoney
Foundation.
Copyright
© 2013 GoldMoney.com
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