Bank of Korea buys 25 tonnes of gold
In what is its first gold purchase in more than a decade the Bank
of Korea says it spent more than $1bn over the past two months in order
to diversify its holdings away from reserve currencies like the dollar
and the euro
Yoo Choonsik and Kim Yeonhee (Reuters)
SEOUL (REUTERS)
South Korea spent more than a billion dollars in its first gold
purchase in more than a decade, as uncertainty about global growth and
sovereign debt push central banks around the world to diversify foreign
reserves.
A brittle global economic recovery and precarious debt conditions in
the United States and Europe have boosted the safe-haven appeal of gold,
lifting bullion to a record high on Friday.
The Bank of Korea said in a statement on Tuesday it bought 25 tonnes
of gold over the past two months, raising its gold holding to 39.4
tonnes, news that helped lift spot gold by around $6 from late Monday.
Reserve currencies, like the dollar and euro, "have been losing their
clout since the recent global financial crisis partly due to abnormal
monetary policy adopted in many countries and fiscal deficit problems,"
said an official at the central bank who declined to be named because he
was not authorized to speak to the media.
Data on 27 major economies from the Bank for International
Settlements shows the dollar's inflation-adjusted real effective value
has dropped by 10 percent in the past two years and the euro has lost 6
percent, reflecting the sharp increase in the amount of each currency in
circulation.
South Korea's gold holdings remain far smaller than that of other
Asian central banks, with China, which ranks sixth globally, the biggest
with 1,054.1 tonnes by the end of May, according to World Gold Council
data.
Japan, No. 9 globally, has 765.2 tonnes of gold, or 3.3 percent of
its total reserves, and 11th-ranked India has 557.7 tonnes, or 8.7
percent.
"South Korea's central bank seems a little late to the party, but
gold investors should continue to expect price support as central
bankers around the world are underinvested in the yellow stuff," said
Sean McGillivray, head of asset allocation at Great Pacific Wealth
Management.
"Investors and central bankers are looking to protect purchasing power, diversifying into the currency of last resort, gold."
With prices hovering near historic highs, the central bank of Asia's
fourth-largest economy said gold looked less lucrative as an investment,
but it was the right time to buy the precious metal because its foreign
reserves had risen above $300 billion.
The news helped boost gold prices, with spot up 0.4 percent at
$1,623.94 an ounce by 0528 GMT. Gold hit a record high of $1,632.30 on
Friday.
"Any news about central banks buying gold reassures consumers and
other major players who are already looking at gold as an investment,"
said Jeffrey Pritchard, analyst at California-based commodities futures
and options brokerage Altavest Worldwide Trading.
CONDITIONS RIPE FOR GOLD PURCHASE
The Bank of Korea said its latest gold purchase was valued at $1.24
billion. It did not say whether it had bought gold bullion or funds, or
whether it plans to buy more gold.
The purchase comes weeks before the central bank is due to face an
annual parliamentary audit, expected in September, and after several
South Korean lawmakers from both the ruling and opposition parties have
repeatedly called for it to boost holdings of gold to diversify
reserves.
At 25 tonnes of gold, equivalent to 803,769 ounces, the average price
paid comes to around $1,543 an ounce, based on Reuters calculations.
A Bank of Korea official said it was the bank's first gold purchase
since at least the 1997-1998 Asian financial crisis when patriotic
Koreans collected the precious metal as part of a campaign to boost the
country's foreign reserves, when it was on the verge of a sovereign
default.
"The country had too small an amount of foreign reserves to diversify
into gold before 2004 and was not able to buy gold between 2005 and
2007 due to concerns about the central bank's annual losses," the Bank
of Korea said.
"Now that our total reserves topped $300 billion and foreign exchange
markets stabilized, we judged that conditions were ripe for us to
increase gold holding."
The increased gold holding would put South Korea in 45th position in
the World Gold Council's list of central banks holding gold, up from
56th previously, the Bank of Korea said.
The United States has the biggest gold holding in its reserves, at
8,133.5 tonnes, or 74.7 percent of total reserves, according to the
WGC's July report. Germany is a distant second with 3,401 tonnes, or
71.7 percent of its total reserves.
The Bank of Korea declined to disclose the purchase price but said it
had entrusted all of its gold holding to the Bank of England for
possible use in gold lending and other related transactions.
Including the gold, South Korea's foreign reserves rose by $6.55
billion in July to $311.03 billion, equivalent to about 30 percent of
the country's annual gross domestic product of just more than $1
trillion in 2010.
South Korea's foreign reserves ranked seventh in the world as of the end of June, the central bank said.
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