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To: Alex who wrote (36998)7/11/1999 7:18:00 PM
From: goldsnow  Respond to of 116779
 
Silvery moon as golden era ends

By Stephen Wyatt

Gold is in trouble. Britain last week sold off just 25
tonnes of its reserves, but the gold price crashed to its
lowest level in 20 years. Clearly, bigger forces are at
work here than the British sale.

The story behind the collapse in gold is big. It reflects the
profound changes in the economic architecture of the
global economy. Gold, as it always has been, is the
barometer of change.

Globalisation, the free floating of the world's major
currencies, European monetary union, deflation as a
result of higher levels of competition and the introduction
of a range of financial derivatives have all played their
part in undermining gold's financial status.

This sea-change in the global economy is the force
driving the gold market lower.

After more than 250 years as the central pillar of
international trade and as the primary reserve asset of
central banks worldwide, gold is now being marginalised,
demonetised and "commoditised".

Not that this is the first time that a primary store of value
has been stripped of its financial status and converted into
a commodity. Ironically, a century ago the same fate
befell silver.

Silver lost 65 per cent of its value between 1871 and
1900 as it lost its place in the financial system.

In 1871, 80 per cent of the world's population used
currencies that were redeemable in silver and another 15
per cent had a bi-metallic choice; currencies redeemable
in either gold or silver.

"Within a decade or so, the monetary world as 95 per
cent of the people knew it was obliterated," said Mr
Andy Smith, precious metals analyst with Mitsui Busan
Commodities in London.

Central banks were then scrambling out of silver into gold
Germany in 1871, the US in 1873, the Latin Union in
1874.

Now central banks are moving out of gold into
currencies.

"The writing on the wall for silver's official fate then was
just as clear as it is for gold's now," Mr Smith said.

"The signposts of gold's demonetisation could not be
brighter if they were sprayed in luminous paint," he said.

He pointed to the removal of the gold backing of the US
dollar in 1971, removal of the obligation to accept gold
payment among IMF members in 1978, dilution of the
gold backing for the Swiss franc in 1998, gold sales by a
host of central banks, including the Bank of England, and
forthcoming sales by the conservative Swiss National
Bank and the IMF.

Yet still there remains a vociferous pro-gold lobby.
Groups like GATA the Gold Anti-Trust Action Group
and the World Gold Council, a body funded by gold
producers worldwide, oppose the demonetisation
arguments of Smith and a number of other analysts, like
Ted Arnold, metals analyst at Prudential Securities in
London, and Bill O'Neill, futures strategist with Merrill
Lynch in New York.

GATA, a US-based body, believes gold is intentionally
being depressed by central banks to support the hefty
short positions of hedge funds and investment banks.

The World Gold Council argues that central banks are
not acting according to the wishes of the public.

Interestingly, similar arguments were posed during the
demontisation of silver. Back in 1888 a royal commission
said that "a great mistake has been made by modern
legislators who have forced gold upon the people".

The demise of silver resulted from an explosion in silver
mine output from 1870 and a collapse in Indian silver
demand. As its scarcity decreased so did its value and its
monetary role.

In contrast, gold's demonetisation has not been caused
by excess annual supplies. In fact, there is an annual gold
supply deficit (gold fabrication demand less annual mine
supply) of around 1,000 tonnes.

Instead, gold's demonetisation is a reflection of changes
in the global economy. These changes, by marginalising
gold as a safety haven asset for investors in times of
financial insecurity and marginalising gold as a reserve
asset for central banks, suddenly focused the market on
the massive holdings of gold in central bank vaults.

This gold stock overhang became the gold market's
burden. Today, central banks and international bodies
hold about 34,000 tonnes of gold, about 10 years worth
of world annual mine supply.

However, no analysts suggest that central banks are
going to liquidate all their gold. Instead it is the
uncertainty of when the next central bank gold sale will
occur and how large this may be that is impacting on
price. It is the fear of future gold sales rather than the
sales themselves that is driving the gold market lower.

And again, this is reflected in the history of the
demonetisation of silver. German silver sales in the
1870s, at about 25 per cent of silver mine output, were
not disproportionate to the Belgium and Netherland gold
sales in the 1990s.

Yet silver prices back in the 1870s and gold prices today
both fell sharply.

The 1888 royal commission into silver said that "the mere
fact of the sale and demonetisation ... would probably
tend to discredit silver and produce an effect upon the
market disproportionate to the amount which was
actually sold".

This great damage to the silver market psyche in 1888
was replicated in the gold market last week when the
Bank of England sold the first 25 tonnes of its total 415
tonne gold sale.

Not a lot of gold but it did enough psychological damage
that gold slumped to 20-year lows.

And gold is not going to get a quick dose of lithium to
cure its depression.

The gold market is now waiting for more Bank of
England gold auctions, for the conservative Swiss
National Bank to begin its liquidation of half of
Switzerland's gold reserves and for the possible IMF
gold sale of 300 tonnes.
afr.com.au