LONDON, Sept 2 — Europe’s most indebted nations are under heavy
pressure from their richer neighbours to sort out their finances, but
they are unlikely to mimic the impoverished gentlefolk of old by selling
off the family silver — or in their case, gold — to do so.
More than 750 tonnes of gold are currently sitting in the state
coffers of Portugal, Greece and Spain alone, equal to about 17 per cent
of the 2010 annual supply of bullion from mining and sales of scrap.
Despite struggling with massive debt burdens and in some cases
accepting multi-billion-euro bailout packages, the so-called PIIGS — the
countries above, plus Ireland and Italy — have not dipped into their
gold reserves to service that debt.
At a time when gold prices have rallied to record highs near US$2,000
(RM6,000) an ounce, this has raised eyebrows elsewhere in Europe.
Senior German lawmaker Michael Fuchs, deputy leader of Chancellor
Angela Merkel’s Christian Democrats, said earlier this month that Italy
should sell its gold reserves to avoid taking on new borrowing.
And back in May, German politician Frank Schaeffler told Bild
newspaper that Portugal should sell its assets. “Before risking other
people’s money, Portugal should first sell its family jewels, especially
its gold reserves,” he said.
But these demands ignore the fact that this gold is not the property of the PIIGS’ governments to sell.
“Foreign exchange reserves are held and managed by central banks, not
by governments,” said Natalie Dempster, director of government affairs
at the World Gold Council. “Forex reserves are set aside for specific
purposes - defence of currency, payment of external debt obligations and
payment of imports.”
“In the past you could have had incidences where governments might
try to overstimulate their economies by running exceptionally loose
monetary policy before an election,” she said. “That is a reason why it
is critical, in an advanced economy, that central banks are
independent.”
Two years ago the Italian government’s proposal to tax the unrealised
gains on its gold reserves was promptly slapped down by the European
Central Bank, which issued a legal opinion to block the plan in July
2009.
The ECB said the move could violate a ban on using central bank
resources to finance the public sector, risked breaching the Bank of
Italy’s independence and threatened to weaken the country’s finances.
Gold value dwarfed
And while gold prices are at record highs, the gold market is still dwarfed by the size of Europe’s debts.
Between them Portugal, Ireland, Italy, Greece and Spain hold some
3,233 tonnes of gold, worth some €132 billion (US$190 billion). Their
combined outstanding public debt, according to estimates from the IMF,
is around €3,289 billion.
If Portugal sold every ounce of its 382.5 tonnes of gold, it would
only raise some 14.9 billion euros — less than a fifth of a recent EU
bailout package.
“The extent of the problem and the holes that need to be filled are
so large that the gold doesn’t really provide a solution,” said Philip
Klapwijk, executive chairman of metals consultancy GFMS.
“If you look at the value of that resource against what they need to
fund in terms of ongoing expenditure and debt issuance, it is not a
solution for most of them.”
Italy, the biggest gold holder among the PIIGS and the world’s
fourth-largest official sector holder of the metal, has 2,450 tonnes,
worth €95 billion at today’s prices.
But selling this gold in any volume would probably precipitate a
crash in prices and would further undermine confidence in Italy’s
ability to manage its finances.
Avenues to be explored
If sales are off the table, there are other ways for gold to be of
use to heavily indebted countries. For example, former Italian prime
minister Romano Prodi, writing in Italian newspaper Il Sole 24 Ore in
August, proposed the creation of a euro bond backed by member states’
gold reserves.
But such proposals remain little explored, analysts say.
“It has slightly surprised me that some of them haven’t looked harder
at some creative uses of gold in terms of gold-backed bonds, which
might be a useful way of trying to lower the cost of borrowing,” said
GFMS’ Klapwijk.
“But again, they come up against the fact that the scale of the
borrowing required is so large that there are probably other ways of
trying to deal with the problem rather than using gold. That would
probably be a drop in the bucket.”
The financial crisis has made European central banks less, not more,
interested in selling gold. Official sector sales were so high in the
1990s that banks united to sign the Central Bank Gold Agreement to limit
sales to 400 tonnes a year.
But these sales have since dwindled to only 1.1 tonnes in the current year of the pact, against 404 tonnes 10 years ago.
Gold is increasingly seen as a valuable portfolio diversifier for the
official sector and a safe store of value at a time paper currencies
are under pressure.
“Spain (and) Portugal sold a lot of their holdings in the past
decade,” said John Bowler of the Economist Intelligence Unit. “(While it
is) frowned on for the central bank to transfer its assets to the
government, I assume that’s what was going on with these sales. It was
certainly what happened in the UK.”
Britain’s then-Chancellor Gordon Brown sold 395 tonnes of gold
between 1999 and 2002, at the start of a 10-year rally that saw prices
rise 600 per cent. The sale of gold that would now be worth US$23.1
billion raised about US$3.5 billion.
Given how badly some European economies are already doing, it would take a brave official to risk a similar move now. — Reuters
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