Posts Tagged ‘Reserve Bank Of India’

India's Shiny New Gold

Wednesday, November 18th, 2009

The IMF sold 200 tonnes of gold to India last month. A new announcement is due…

WE HAVE BEEN prepared for this for so long now, writes Julian Phillips at GoldForecaster.

The much-expected International Monetary Fund’s gold sales had been a threat to the Gold Price for years. But now the clouds of speculation are being blown away and reality is presenting itself in a way never expected.

Part of this has been the expectation that the IMF gold sales would be dragged out over a long period. But as we have been telling subscribers for an equally long period, we did not think this would be the case, because the purpose of the sale was to maximize the proceeds and quickly. Now with India taking 200 tonnes of the 403.3 tonnes, our position has been verified.

The announcement of the sale of 200 of the 403.3 tonnes of gold at an average price of $1045 is, we believe, the first of a minimum of two announcements that will see the 403.3 tonnes completely sold.

The Reserve Bank of India said the purchase was an official sector off-market transaction. The transaction, which is being settled now, involved daily sales, phased over a two-week period during October 19-30, with each daily sale conducted at a price set on the basis of market prices prevailing that day.

The Reserve Bank of India may buy more gold from the International Monetary Fund if it offers to sell the precious metal, a senior finance ministry official said.

The total sales proceeds are equivalent to $6.7 billion. Payment is expected to be in major currencies that make up the SDR. Please note that it will not be made in just the US Dollar.

The sales are establishing a good short-term average price, so as not to leave the IMF or India open to the accusation of selling too low or too high. Inside India, gold buyers across the country have to be made aware that their central bank feels these to be good prices. We expect a pick-up in Indian retail buying because of this consequential feeling of security in Buying Gold at these prices.

The RBI says it will buy more "if [the IMF] offers to sell the gold". So either the IMF is selling the gold in chunks (and not the whole amount to anybody), or perhaps offering it to a few central banks. Hence, the Reserve Bank of India is waiting to see it the offers to others are taken up. If they are not then it will pick up the refused amount. Perhaps they will take the entire 403.3 tonnes.

If the amounts are refused by other central banks, it seems unlikely that the public will hear of these refusals. So we expect either another announcement saying India has bought the balance of 203.3 tonnes, in addition to the first tranche of 200 tonnes, or that another central bank (China, Russia…?) has bought the balance.

Either way, any concurrent/consequential sales being made by the IMF are likely to be announced very soon. And there seems little point to a sale being made anonymously now that the India purchase has been announced. The cat is out of the bag. Add to this the fact that central banks are Buying Gold now, turning the market tide that for more than 25 years had seen them as net sellers year-on-year. Officially, publicly, they are buyers now.

Most people expected China or Russia to be the IMF’s first buyers, because they have been Buying Gold in the open market for years now. The announcement that India has bought so much and is prepared to buy more now enlarges the list of central bank buyers. This action speaks far louder than words. Since then Sri Lanka has said it is Buying Gold for its reserves (although only a guessed amount of 5.3 tonnes). Who next?

Gold has a firm place in the monetary system,[as a reserve asset, not a means of exchange] in the face of an unstable monetary system, that is still decaying. This purchase expresses that sentiment, at central bank level.

The shape of market demand will and is already broadening to include major institutions. Their appetite has a huge capacity, so traditional gold demand may well be pushed to one side as they buy what they want. This will be at current or higher and possibly much higher prices.

Ready to Buy  Gold…?

Source:India's Shiny New Gold

Global Gold Index: New Record High

Wednesday, November 11th, 2009

The price of Gold just hit a new record high against the world’s top 10 currencies…

GOLD didn’t only break new Dollar highs last week.

Jumping to 8-month highs against the Euro, Swiss Franc and Canadian Dollar, it also took out fresh records versus the Indian Rupee and Chinese Yuan.

And more critically still, gold broke new ground against the world’s major currencies en masse. Critically as in critical.

Buying 200 tonnes of metal from the IMF, the Reserve Bank of India sent gold to new highs in terms of all the money that counts at the start of November.

Weighted against the world’s top 10 currencies by GDP, the price of gold broke its previous high on Wednesday this week. Shown as a percentage change since Jan. 2000 above, BullionVault’s Global Gold Index does indeed lag the Dollar price (244% vs. 289% to date), but it’s clearly beaten all other asset classes so far this decade.

Friday’s news that America’s job-loss recovery is worsening then confirmed the new record, peeping just above the previous hit set in Feb. of this year.

And given what India’s move says about Dollar diversification (that a lump of metal yielding zero and trading at all-time record highs also beats holding Euros, Yen, Yuan, Sterling, Reals, Loonies, Roubles and Pesos…), gold’s return to central-bank bids might be a long way from finished.

Ten years ago, nobody wanted it. Least of all those central banks in Europe holding the most but about to launch a new currency – one lacking any sovereign-government backing, let alone a link to Gold Bullion.

By the time they stopped selling gold amid the financial crisis wrought by their last flirtation with record-low returns to cash, the rising powers of China, India and Russia – moving from fifth, ninth and twelfth to 4th, 8th and 10th in terms of global GDP respectively – had already begun hoarding metal themselves.

Only now, the United States, Japan and Europe are holding rates at fresh record lows as near to zero as damn it. If we were in the business of speculating on the future path of Gold Prices, we’d guess that the official bid for gold, let alone private-sector demand, looks likely to hold strong from here.

Ready to Buy  Gold…?

Source:Global Gold Index: New Record High

India Buys Gold; Indians Don't

Tuesday, November 10th, 2009

How the Reserve Bank of India’s 200-tonne IMF gold purchase contrasts with private Indian dealing…

read more

Source:India Buys Gold; Indians Don't

RBI to issue Rs 5 denomination currency – Central Chronicle

Thursday, April 16th, 2009
RBI to issue Rs 5 denomination currency
Central Chronicle, India
By Our Staff Reporter Allahabad Bank, on the eve of entering 145th of dedicated service to the nation, launched retail selling of gold coins as `allbank Gold' to the public on Wednesday. B Mahapatra, Director, Reserve Bank of India (RBI),

Source:RBI to issue Rs 5 denomination currency – Central Chronicle