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International News Updates |
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8 April 2009 NEW YORK (MarketWatch) - Leaders
from the Group of 20 nations Thursday endorsed the
International Monetary Fund's plan to sell 403 tons of
gold to raise funds to support the world's poorest
countries.
The announcement from G20 leaders helped add pressures
to Thursday's gold trading. Gold futures fell $20.30,
or 2.2%, to $905.80 an ounce in recent trading on the
Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange.
See Metals Stocks.
The G20 vowed in its statement to "use the additional
resources from agreed IMF gold sales for concessional
finance for the poorest countries." Read more on G20.
The endorsement suggests that the IMF's gold sales
plan is likely to be approved by its member countries
later this year.
The IMF has been planning to sell gold since as early
as 2007 to diversify its revenues and strengthen its
balance sheet. But the plan needs to be approved by an
85% majority vote from its 185 members.
The U.S., which has 17% voting power in the fund,
essentially holds veto power. The U.S. government has
informed the IMF that Congressional authorization by
law is required before it is able to support the plan.
The U.S. Treasury announced last year that it will
seek authority from Congress.
Hussein Allidina, an analyst at Morgan Stanley, said
in a note Thursday that he expects the IMF to
implement the sales over the next few years, "but do
not believe that this presents a strong negative risk
to gold prices - as it will be 'orderly' and maybe
even off market."
Minimize market impact
The IMF, which holds more than 3,200 tons of gold, is
the third-largest holder in the world after the U.S.
and Germany.
Most of the IMF's gold holdings come from the fund's
member countries, which are required to commit 25% of
their quota in gold. The fund can't sell those
holdings into the markets.
But an additional 403.3 tons of gold the fund acquired
through off-market transactions in 1999 and 2000 -
such as interest payment from countries that received
IMF loans - are not subject to the restriction.
If member countries approved the gold sales, the IMF
can find ready buyers in countries with low gold
reserves, especially Russia and some Asian countries
such as China, Taiwan, and India. China, with less
than 1% of its $2 trillion reserves held in gold, has
expressed interest in buying more gold, crude oil, and
other strategic commodities.
According to the IMF's plan, the gold selling will be
implemented in coordination with major central banks
to minimize the impact on the market.
The European Central Bank said Wednesday it had
completed the sale of 35.5 tons of gold.
The gold sales were in full conformity with the second
Central Banks Gold Agreement, which was signed in 2004
by the ECB and other European major official gold
holders.
The second CBGA, which caps total gold sales of the
signatories at 500 tons a year, expires in September.
Some analysts expect a third CBGA to be signed before
September.
Moming Zhou is a MarketWatch reporter based in New
York. |