The Greek B.I.S. Currency Gold Swap

What of Greece’s 111 tonnes of gold?

It is pure conjecture on our part to link the gold holdings of three of the Eurozone’s financially weakest members to the B.I.S.

In the first quarter of 2010 the B.I.S. recorded the jump in gold holdings that it had acquired. Four years prior to that Portugal and Spain had sold gold through the Central Bank Gold Agreement on the open market. So we do not link sales under that agreement with these B.I.S. transactions.

The B.I.S. acquired this gold though a set of Currency / Gold arrangements the details of which have not been made public. But it was at about this time that the Eurozone debt crisis reared its ugly head. In advance of any rescue plans, when the respective central banks probably first began discussions on the matter it would have been deemed prudent to make a collateral arrangement using the asset of last resort, gold, to secure their gold against any future bailout package being offered.

While a swap arrangement is not a sale of gold nor is it a disposal, it is sufficient for the B.I.S. to record the gold swapped as an acquisition in its books. But the central banks involved need not record its disposal, giving us a rather clandestine situation.

Hence the question, “What of Greece’s 111 tonnes of gold?”

We cannot see just how the Greek bailout package can force the sale of state assets with no mention of its gold [worth $5.5 billion at present prices]. We have no doubt that Greece will cling onto the family’s jewels as long as possible, but the creditors will fight to get the gold as hard as Greece fights to hold onto it. Should the news come out that the gold was handed over last year in a futile ‘swap’ there will be fur flying and not a few of the present government will lose their seats in Parliament. It will be a very sensitive issue. Perhaps that’s why it hasn’t been mentioned yet?

What price Greece’s gold?

In times like today in Greece, 111 tonnes of gold is worth considerably more in international collateral to a bankrupt nation than $5.5 billion. It is the means to cover imports, when there is no other money to pay for them. These may be necessities. Money is far more valuable when you haven’t got it than when you have! And gold will be fully accepted from Greece, anywhere and anytime. If it’s already gone, then there’ll be more than a sense of humor failure in Athens.

And for this reason alone gold as a reserve asset is undervalued. Central banks hold gold for times such as these.

When the whole world hits these types of crises [such as war], a currency price put on gold is not the basis on which gold is used. The emotional value in such times is far higher for any deal to be concluded. At such times gold can secure far more goods that its price implies, because of the dubious value national currencies will have internationally. When gold is tied to these currencies, then gold has considerably more value because of the support it gives these currencies. And this is why the issue of Greece’s gold is so pertinent.

If such a crisis happens in isolation, then the dollar or euro price of gold would be used, because of the relative stability in the rest of the world. So Greece may get no more than $5.5 billion for its gold. But if the B.I.S. currency/gold swap were tied to sufficient bailout support being given, then its value would extend far beyond its price.

This is why gold’s price rise is far from over. The path the developed world is following currently is headed to potentially stormy days where gold’s use as selective collateral will bring far more than its market value to a nation. That’s why central banks are gripping hard to the gold they have or buying more.

Conclusion

Are central banks tempted to confiscate debt-distressed nation’s gold?

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