La nota que sigue
detalla la forma en que China utiliza sus reservas de oro para disputar la
hegemonía del dólar y fortalecer su propia moneda, el reminbi. Fue escrita por
Koos Jansen para el sitio web AllChinaReview.com. Acá va:
Título: China
Embraces Gold In Advance Of Post-Dollar Era
Texto: To
challenge the US dollar hegemony and increase its power in the global realm of
finance, China has a potent gold strategy. Whilst the State Council is
preparing itself for the inevitable decay of the current international monetary
system, it has firmly embraced gold in its economy. With a staggering pace the
government has developed the Chinese domestic gold market, stimulated private
gold accumulation and increased its official gold reserves in order to ensure
financial stability and support the internationalisation of the renminbi.
“The outbreak of
the crisis and its spillover to the entire world reflect the inherent
vulnerabilities and systemic risks in the existing international monetary
system…. The desirable goal of reforming the international monetary system,
therefore, is to create an international reserve currency that is disconnected
from individual nations and is able to remain stable in the long run…”
Quote from
Governor of the PBOC Zhou Xiaochuan 2009.
In the present
zeitgeist we find ourselves on the verge of a shift in the global monetary
order. The shocks through the financial complex in 2008 that reaffirmed the
innate fragility of the US dollar as the world reserve currency have sparked
China to become a vocal proponent of de-Americanization, although its end goal
is communicated less clearly. Being the second largest economy of the world but
relatively in arrears regarding physical gold reserves, China has a strong
motive to surreptitiously work on its gold program until completion. For, if it
would be candid in its gold ambitions, the price would significantly run
higher, potentially disturbing financial markets and narrowing its window of
opportunity to prepare for the next phase.
State Council
Rapidly Developed Domestic Gold Market And Stimulated Private Hoarding
China has been
infatuated with gold for thousands of years. In the mainland, gold mining and
use can be traced back to at least 4,000 years ago, and the metal has always
represented economic strength and was regarded as the emperors’ symbol of
power. Although the Communist Party of China captured the monopoly in gold
trade and heavily restricted private gold possession since 1949, in lockstep
with the gradual liberalisation and the ascend of the Chinese economy the state
started to develop the domestic gold market in the late seventies, which
accelerated in 2002.
A new page was
turned when the Gold Armed Police started operating in 1979, not coincidentally
a few years after the US detached its dollar, the world reserve currency, from
gold. This army division was initially assigned to gold mining exploration and
has done so quite fruitfully. Since 1979, Chinese domestic mining output has
grown 2,137 % from an annual 20 tonnes to an estimated 467 tonnes in 2015. In
1982, the first steps were taken in reviving China’s gold retail channels. For
the first time since 1949 people were allowed to buy jewelry and the China Gold
Coin Incorporation started issuing Panda coins. The Peoples Bank Of China
(PBOC) continued to be the primary gold dealer that fixed the price and
controlled all supply flows.
The real reform
of the Chinese gold market was implemented on 30 October 2002 by the launch of
the Shanghai Gold Exchange, erected to serve the full liberalisation of the
domestic gold market. From that date the fixing of the gold price in China was
transmitted from the PBOC to the free market. In 2004, the State Council
approved gold as an investment for individuals and the PBOC slowly repelled
control over supply flows. The Chinese gold market fiercely rose from its
ashes. By 2007 the market was functioning as intended when nearly all gold
supply and demand was flowing through the SGE system6. A year later, in 2008,
the Shanghai Futures Exchange launched a gold futures contract supplementing
existing derivatives at the SGE.
The Shanghai Gold
Exchange (SGE), which is a subsidiary of the PBOC, is the very core of the
Chinese physical gold market. Its infrastructure provides a single liquid
exchange overseen by the state, granting all participants a trusty venue that
can be efficiently developed and monitored. The mechanics of the Chinese market
incentivise nearly all supply and demand to connect within the SGE system. As a
consequence, by the amount of gold withdrawn from the vaults of the SGE – data
that was published up until December 2015 in the Chinese Market Data Weekly
Reports – we could gauge Chinese wholesale gold demand.
After the crisis
in 2008, it became apparent in the higher echelons of the Chinese government
that the development of the gold market and private accumulation had to
accelerate to protect the Chinese economy from looming turmoil. Through state
owned banks and media wires the citizenry were stimulated to diversify savings
into physical gold. Currently, at Chinese banks, numerous gold saving programs
can be entered into, or individuals can open an SGE account and purchase gold
directly in the wholesale market.
“Individual
investment demand is an important component of China’s gold reserve system, ….
Practice shows that gold possession by citizens is an effective supplement to
official reserves and is essential for our national financial security.”
Quote by the
President of the China Gold Association 2012.
When the gold
price came down sharply in April 2013, Chinese gold demand literally exploded
as in a once in a lifetime event. In between 22 and 26 April, 117 tonnes of
physical gold were withdrawn from the vaults of the SGE.
China has been a
gigantic gold buyer ever since. Withdrawals from the vaults of the SGE in 2015
accounted for 2,596 tonnes (90 % of global annual mine output), up from a mere
16 tonnes in 2002. SGE withdrawal data correlates with elevated gold import by
China.
Whilst clearly
enjoying their bargain purchases, China has established a trend of increasingly
obfuscating the true size of its gold demand. Not long ago several reports were
released in the mainland that disclosed total gold demand to be the equivalent
to SGE withdrawals. Since 2012 these reports have been hidden from public eyes
and in January 2016 the SGE ceased publishing withdrawal data10. Although
annual SGE withdrawals have exceeded 2,100 tonnes since 2013, what is generally
publicised as gold demand is roughly half of this, merely the demand at jewelry
shops and banks that excludes direct purchases from individual and
institutional clients at the SGE. As a result, the global consensus is that
Chinese gold demand is approximately 1,000 tonnes a year though in reality it’s
twice this volume.
PBOC Accumulating
Gold To Support Renminbi Internationalisation
To free itself
from US dollar supremacy and force the sequent monetary system, China’s goal is
to internationalise the renminbi. For achieving its target, gold is identified
as the key. It is the absolute monetary asset to support the renminbi, the
dollars’ Achilles heel and a hedge during monetary stress. Next to the swift
progression in the Chinese private gold market we can observe the PBOC is
covertly buying gold and has launched the Shanghai International Gold Exchange
to prepare renminbi internationalisation.
“For China the
strategic mission of gold lies in the support of renminbi internationalization,
and so let China become a world economic power…. Gold is both a very honest
asset and forms the very material basis for modern fiat currencies…. Gold is
the world’s only monetary asset that has no counter party risk, and is the only
cross-nation, cross-language … and cross-culture globally recognized monetary
asset.
That is why in
order for gold to fulfill its destined mission, we must raise our gold holdings
a great deal, and do so with a solid plan. Step one should take us to the 4,000
tonnes mark, more than Germany and become number two in the world, next, we
should increase step by step towards 8,500 tonnes, more than the US.”
Quote by the
President of the China Gold Association 2014.
Not surprisingly,
China’s strategy is everything but linear. Let us analyse the State Council’s
most recent actions with respect to gold and the internationalisation of the
renminbi. In addition to gold accumulation, the State Council has aimed to kick
start renminbi internationalisation by having it included into the International
Monetary Fund’s (IMF) basket of currencies, the Special Drawing Rights (SDR),
in 2015. For acceptance, the IMF required openness of China’s international
reserves, of which the PBOC hadn’t updated its gold reserves since 2009. Here
we found the PBOC stretched between opposing forces; it obviously preferred to
hoard gold in concealment not to disturb financial markets, while at the same
time it was requested to open its books. In July 2015 the PBOC decided to
revise its official gold reserves by 604 tonnes to 1,658 tonnes, which was
probably not the whole truth but served both means, as markets barely reacted
to the increment – the gold price has not increased since then – and the IMF
has granted annexation of the renminbi into the SDR.
How much gold
does the PBOC truly hold? Before we make an estimate we must first address the
question, how and where does the PBOC buy gold? Some analysts assume the PBOC
buys gold in the domestic market at the SGE. According to my research this is
not true. My sources in the bullion industry tell me first hand that the PBOC
buys gold in the international OTC market using Chinese banks as proxies. And
this intelligence fits into the wider analysis, as there are many reasons why
the PBOC would not buy gold through the SGE.
A rough estimate
suggests the PBOC holds nearly 4,000 tonnes in gold reserves, more than twice
the amount they officially disclose. In a quest for any clues we must visit the
heart of the gold wholesale market. Data by the London Bullion Market Association
points out there have been approximately 1,700 tonnes of monetary gold exported
from London between 2011 and 2015. China’s central bank is the foremost suspect
for these purchases, given its size and motives, and the tonnage exported from
London is consistent with other sources that state the PBOC has bought roughly
500 tonnes a years since 2009. All clues together point to the PBOC holding
roughly 4,000 tonnes currently. Although this remains speculation.
More of China’s
gold strategy was revealed by the recent launch of the Shanghai International
Gold Exchange (SGEI) that offers gold trading in renminbi for clients
worldwide, in an attempt by China to strengthen the internationalisation of the
renminbi. In itself the SGEI clearly underlines China’s gold ambitions16, but
the punch line was added with the launch of the Silk Road Gold Fund in 201517.
Led by the SGE(I), the $16 billion fund will boost the gold industry along the
Silk Road and in turn “will facilitate gold purchases for the central banks of
member states to increase their holdings of the precious metal”, according to
the Chinese state press agency Xinhua18. Not only is China trying to persuade
all mining and consumption of gold along the Silk Road economic project to be
settled through the SGEI in renminbi, additionally the Chinese promote gold as
an essential component of central banks’ international reserves going forward.
We must conclude
that the State Council views gold as part of the coming international monetary
system. Why else does it quickly develop the domestic gold market to be
embedded in financial markets, surreptitiously accumulate vast gold reserves
and establish a framework to boost gold business on the Eurasian continent
around the SGEI? In my view, China contributes significant value to its gold
strategy in the shadow of the apparent failure of the current fiat monetary
system. And if true, China’s central bank having nearly 4,000 tonnes of gold is
well on its way to introduce the next phase.
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