Realman commeth for the gold bugs <nfg>
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bloomberg.com
Top Financial News Sun, 13 Jun 1999, 6:29am EDT Bank Gold Sales to Equal at Least Nine Months Output, Pushing Prices Down By Mark Deen
Bank Gold Sales to Push Prices Lower, Crimp Profits (Update1) (Adds comments from G-7 in 2nd paragraph and from 18th)
London, June 13 (Bloomberg) -- Central banks and the IMF are likely to sell gold equivalent to at least nine months' global output within five years, squeezing mining companies profits and pushing prices below current 20-year lows, analysts said.
Gold has dropped 10 percent in the five weeks since the U.K. Treasury joined a growing list of government bodies, including Swiss National Bank and the International Monetary Fund, that have sold or are considering selling much of their gold. Finance Ministers of the Group of Seven leading industrial countries yesterday backed the IMF plan to sell up to 10 million ounces.
Investors are concerned because more than a decade's global mine output is in government vaults. Gold for immediate delivery, which closed in London interbank trade on Friday at $260.65 an ounce, fell to a 20-year low of $257.15 an ounce last week. ''I'm convinced all of these sales are going to happen,'' said Tony Warwick-Ching, an analyst at Virtual Metals Consulting Ltd. ''The keepers of the buffer stock are stepping back --prices haven't yet seen the floor.''
The U.K., the world's ninth-largest gold holder, said May 7 that it plans to unload more than half of its 715-metric-ton gold reserves in the next three to five years, starting with an auction of 25 tons July 6. In April, Swiss voters approved a proposal to break a 100-year link between the franc and gold, paving the way for the government to sell 1,300 tons. Switzerland holds the fourth-largest stocks of above-ground gold.
Australia and Argentina both sold more than half their reserves in 1997.
The proposed government sales are because other investments, such as government bonds, give a better rate of return, analysts said. U.K. Chancellor of the Exchequer Gordon Brown said Friday the decision to sell was merely ''technical.''
Over the last year, the average interest earned on lending gold for a month was 0.9 percent, compared with an average return of 4.3 percent earned by one-month U.S. Treasury bills.
IMF Sale
Meanwhile the U.S., Canada, Japan, Britain and France have also said this year that they support a plan for the IMF to sell between 5 and 10 million ounces of bullion to relieve the debt burdens of the world's poorest nations.
For mining companies with high production costs, the decline of gold threatens their existence. A 22-percent drop in prices in 1997, as Australia and Argentina sold, prompted cost cutting and consolidation. Further such measures could prove difficult, analysts said. ''The producers have used up much of the easy fat cutting and are now much closer to the bread line,'' Warwick-Ching said.
South Africa, the world's largest gold producer, has the highest average costs of production the top four producing countries. Costs averaged $273 an ounce in 1998, according to London-based Gold Fields Mineral Services, compared with an average price of $294 an ounce. With average prices this month of $264, many producers are relying on forward sales of their output, made when prices were higher, to protect them from losses. If prices remain below cost when those forward sales run out, mines could close.
Miners' Plea
This year's slump, which pushed gold to its lowest since 1973 when adjusted for inflation, is likely to garner renewed calls from mining executives and bankers attending a gold conference in London tomorrow for government sales to be spread over a long-enough time to minimize the decline in prices. ''The most important question is still whether there is a way for central bankers to sell that doesn't destroy the gold market, '' said Kamal Naqvi, an analyst at Macquarie Bank.
Yet central bankers and politicians around the world, are unable to agree on the sale of gold reserves. ''How do you do it? It's very difficult,'' said Warwick- Ching ''It means you'd have to overcome things like a veto from the French, who have always opposed sales.''
Where the U.K. was able to decide unilaterally to sell more than half of its 715-ton reserve, the German government must get the approval of its central bank to support sales by the International Monetary Fund, and the Swiss have just held the first of what may prove to be a series of referendums on gold sales.
And Germany's Bundesbank is voicing its concern about the market impact of the government gold sales.
German Concern
Selling gold to finance debt relief has the 'unpleasant' side effects of sinking prices and thereby 'drastically' reducing the incomes of some of the world's poorest countries, Bundesbank council member Ernst Welteke said.
Welteke, set to replace Hans Tietmeyer as Bundesbank president and European Central Bank council member in September, said conditions must be placed on general debt relief, adding the democratic practices of countries receiving aid and their regard to human rights must be taken into consideration. ''One also has to ask oneself, how the ever increasing relief of debt is to be financed,'' said Welteke in a pre-release of an interview with German radio station Hessischer Rundfunk.
The German central bank has been wary of the IMF's plan, maintaining that gold should be held in reserve by the IMF in case of a future financial crisis. The IMF has been considering a gold sale since September 1996, when it started a program to help poor countries such as Bolivia and Burkina Faso to pay off their debts.
In the meantime, prices are set to keep falling, analysts say. ''For me, $250 an ounce seems likely in the next few weeks, but there is certainly potential for prices to go below that in the longer term,'' Naqvi said.
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