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Strategies & Market Trends : Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis

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To: Knighty Tin who wrote (44849)1/20/2006 1:27:13 PM
From: mishedlo  Read Replies (1) of 116555
 
Iran denies shifting assets in Europe
[does this mean they are about to? Mish]
gulf-daily-news.com

TEHRAN: Iran yesterday denied reports that it was moving billions of dollars in hard currency from European banks to Asia and said Europe had no right to freeze its assets. Economy Minister Davoud Danesh-Jafari dismissed a report in pan-Arab newspaper Asharq Al Awsat that Iran had ordered government departments to withdraw currency from European banks, fearing possible sanctions over its disputed nuclear programme.
Danesh-Jafari described the news report as "politicised" and "media-driven."
"International law does not allow Europeans to do such a thing (freeze assets)," Danesh-Jafari said.
"Should they do it, it would be contrary to their interests because oil-producing countries... and other countries would become anxious and would transfer their financial reserves to more secure locations," he added.
The London-based Arabic newspaper had quoted an unnamed Iranian central bank source as saying Iran had decided not to allow the Europeans the chance to freeze its bank accounts in case of a political or military confrontation over its nuclear ambitions.
"A number of Iranian regime-linked figures have already withdrawn their private capital from European banks and deposited it in private banks in Hong Kong, as well as Dubai, Beirut, Singapore and Malaysia, over fears of account freezing," the source said.
"The size of these deposits amounts to $8 billion - a quarter of Iran's hard-currency deposits," the source said, adding that the step did not involve Swiss banks.
However, Iran's Central Bank chief Ebrahim Sheibani denied "the freezing of Iran's hard-currency accounts in European banks," according to the official IRNA news agency.
Asked about the possible freezing of Iranian assets, he said: "We will do all that is necessary."
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