A Virtual Study Room for the IAS Aspirants. [This Blog showcases all of my lectures on Indian Economics delivered to the IAS aspirants during 2009--2012 at CII-Suresh Neotia Centre for Excellence, City Centre-I, Salt Lake, Kolkata. All my lectures being delivered at Civil Service Study Centre of Administrative Training Institute, Government of West Bengal will be gradually uploaded to this site.)]
Friday, October 14, 2011
Wednesday, October 12, 2011
Recent Global Crisis and the Demand for Gold
Recent Global Crisis and the Demand for Gold by Central Banks: An Analytical Perspective(Excerpts)
A Karunagaran (RBI)
Introduction
Ever since global financial crisis erupted,
there seems to be a perceptible escalation in gold price. Although a
number of reasons have been conjectured, the augmentations of the
official reserves of gold across many countries have been widely
perceived as one of the important cause for spiralling gold price.
This is corroborated by the recent gold investment digest (WGC, 2010)
which reported that after two decades, a steady source of supply to the
gold market, in 2010, central banks had become ‘net buyers of gold’.
India also officially purchased 200 tonnes of gold from IMF in October
2009, which placed its position ahead of Russia to ninth place
(Bloomberg, 2009). However, with continuous purchase of gold by many
central banks during 2010, Russia progressed to eighth position, while
India was pushed to eleventh position (WGC, 2010). Besides, it was
reported that India’s purchase of gold was among the factors that
impacted gold price in the world market and also boosted the price
expectations (commodityonline, 2009). However, Subramanian (2010),
stated India’s acquisition of gold, from the IMF is seen with some
national pride, as a reversal of the early 1990s decision to mortgage
gold. Similarly, India’s purchase of gold was also viewed with the
rationale that the uncertainty of the major reserve currencies, (viz.,
the dollar and euro) spurred central banks, including India and
China, to buy gold. The Reserve Bank had stated that gold was bought
with the intent to diversify its foreign exchange reserve, which is not
uncommon among the central banks. In this background of widely
divergent observations, attempt is made to examine (i) whether Reserve
Bank’s purchase of gold is an aberration or a strategy to diversify its
foreign reserves, (ii) the global trend of gold in official reserves
among the central banks, especially during and post global crisis (iii)
whether RBI’s purchase of gold influenced the escalating gold price
trend and (iv) to trace the economic rationale for central banks to
prefer buying gold, especially during crisis.
Recent Global Financial Crisis and the Demand for Gold by the Central Banks: Some Evidence
The period between mid-2007 and 2009 have been the most
tumultuous in financial markets’ recent history as the world economy
plunged into ‘Great Recession’ a la Volcker (2009) since the
‘Great Depression’. It resulted in banks collapse, equity markets
tumbled across the globe, trade shrunk, capital flows dried up, growth
slumped and credit spreads escalated sending investors fleeing for the
cover of traditional safe haven assets such as government bonds and gold
(Green, 2009). Most notably, the unique feature of the ‘Great
Recession’ was that, it virtually put even the long trusted financial
institutions, to ‘acid test’ on their competence of ‘liquid portfolio’
management. Moreover, brought to the fore the extraordinary
vulnerability of the global financial system to disruptions in
wholesale funding markets (IMF, 2011B). Even century old financial
institutions were reduced to rubble. It is distressing to note that,
even after the lapse of three years, the global recovery remains elusive
and heavily reliant on monetary and fiscal stimulus for whatever
little growth it has, making a quick reversal in the fiscal situation
unlikely (IMF, 2010). Downside risks were increasing and continued to do
so in early Financial Year 2011 (IMF, 2011A). In fact, symptoms of
excessive risk taking are evident in a few advanced and a number of
emerging market economies (IMF, 2011B). The IMF estimated that advanced
economies’ debt/GDP ratios will exceed 100 per cent of GDP in 2014,
some 35 percentage points higher than when the crisis began. As a
result, sovereign bond issuance is likely to remain at historically
high levels in the coming years and further sovereign downgrades seem
likely (WEO, 2010). Accordingly, adding to the woes, some of the
prominent European countries’ (i.e., GIIPS)5
sovereign bonds debacle shook the confidence of investors and
institutions in the sovereign bond market. Over and above, the latest
and biggest in the series of events that contributed to the uncertainty
in global markets was the recent downgrading of the U.S credit rating
from ‘AAA to AA+’. While on the other, the gold market remained liquid
throughout the financial crisis and, even at the height of liquidity
strains in all other markets (Green, 2009). This reflects the depth and
breadth of the gold market, as well as the flight-to-quality tendencies
exhibited by investors. Because, gold holds its values even at the
adverse market conditions (Baur et al., 2010). A study
estimates that the daily turnover volumes in the gold market to be
larger than even the UK Gilt and German Bund markets. Despite recession
following crisis, gold price soared by 25 per cent in 2009 to US$
1,087.5 /oz registering the ninth consecutive annual increase. It
further continued to increase to reach US$ 1,410/oz by end of December
20106 (further up by more than 24 per cent). Baur et al.
(2010) stated since the beginning of the financial crisis in July 2007
to March 2009, the nominal gold price has risen by 42 per cent. Thus
gold has proved to be the sole reliable instrument, which bears no
counterparty or credit risk, and is a permissible reserve asset,
practically, in every central bank in the world. In view of this, many
central banks either stopped selling or turned out to be net buyers of
gold (Table 4) during the global crisis. Incidentally, it may be
underscored that countries opting to buy gold, especially during
economic crisis and uncertainty are not new as such trends were
observed even during the earlier occasions of crisis. The credit and
economic crisis triggered fresh demand for the precious metal, similar
to what were experienced during other major global crises, for
instance, even the U.S. opted for steady purchases of gold in the 1930s
and 1940s (Green, 2009).
WGC (2010) also reported that the central banks became net buyers of gold for the first time in 21 years.7
In the first half of 2011, central banks were net buyers of over 155
tonnes of gold, almost double the 87 tonnes of net purchases in 2010
(WGC, 2011) – signalling the end of an era in which the official
sector had been a source of significant supply to the gold market.
The Central Bank of Philippines is well known for active
buying of gold even from the open market. Therefore, its gold reserve
is subject to fluctuation as it buys up domestic production and later
sells in the market. The Philippines was also a net purchaser in both
2008 and 2009, in contrast to being a net seller in the years 2003 to
2007. The Philippines central bank has stated explicitly that it holds
gold for its diversification, security and inflation hedge benefits.
Venezuela, also periodically buys gold from the domestic production but
for many years it had used gold in such a way that it did not entail
increasing its formal gold reserves. However, it also bought from
domestic production adding to its gold reserves during and after the
global financial crisis (2009 and 2010).
Similarly, Qatar reported to have added 12 tonnes to its
reserves during 2007. The Governor of the Saudi Arabian Monetary Agency
(SAMA) has, confirmed that the increase of 180 tonnes in the country’s
gold reserves announced earlier did not represent a recent purchase of
gold, but rather a reclassification of gold it already owned into the
category of official reserves. Germany and France were among the
prominent EU countries for big sale of gold but ostensibly slowed down
their sale during and post crisis.
Some of the Central Commonwealth Independent States (CIS)
countries such as Russia, Ukraine, Belarus and Kazakhstan are also
prominent in purchasing gold in the recent years. The Central Bank of
the Russian Federation bought almost at regular intervals some quantity
of gold thereby bringing the total of Russia’s gold reserves to 664
tonnes (businessworld.com). In 2011, Russia has planned to buy 100
tons as reported by Bloomberg.com (2011).
China being the world’s top producer of gold overtaking South
Africa, revealed that it had stacked up its own government holdings of
gold to 1,054 tonnes from 600 tonnes when it last reported its
holdings in 2003 thus increasing its gold reserves by as much as 76 per
cent since 2003 as reported by the official Xinhua News in April
2009. Incidentally, China do not permit export of gold ingots, only
jewellery are permitted, leaving plentiful supplies for the domestic
market (financialpost.com). Ever since the global crisis which impacted
the US dollar strongly, China is reported to be converting its
sizable forex reserves into gold (commodityonline.com). China has
further aggressive programme to buy gold as an alternative asset
(Subramanian, 2010).
Mexico bought 93.3 metric tons since January 2011, increasing
its holdings from just around 6.9 metric tons to 100 metric tons in
recent months. Mexico’s purchase formed part of the central bank’s
ordinary investment activities, and the gold represents about 4 per
cent of the nation’s international reserves as reported by the Banco de
Mexico. It further clarified that these purchases are part of the
“regular policy of the Bank in regards to investment and
diversification”.
The Bank of Thailand also purchased 15.6 tonnes of gold in
July 2010. With the country’s foreign currency reserves growing rapidly
in recent years, this purchase helped to restore the proportion of
gold in Thailand’s total reserve portfolio. Along with India,
Bangladesh and Sri Lanka also bought gold from IMF at around the same
time. South Korea's central bank became the latest official sector
buyer, announcing the purchase of 25 tonnes, its first foray into the
gold market in more than a decade (Reuters, 2011).
It is amply clear from the above survey, the series of events
in recent years, notably the unsettled global financial crisis,
followed by the GIIPS debt crisis and the recent downgrading of
sovereign credit rating of the U.S. have tipped the balance away from
net selling of gold by the official sectors towards net buying. Seen
from that perspective, two aspects become palpable. Firstly, the
increasing uncertainty due to global financial crisis and aftermath
pushed central banks, both advanced and emerging economies to stock up
gold. Secondly, India’s recent purchase of gold is no exception and is
in line with global trend. Thus the recent global macroeconomic and
financial crisis has only reinforced the importance of gold as part of
official reserves in the balance sheets of central banks around the
world. The IMF’s latest Annual Report (2010) also revealed that the
market value of gold reserves increased by 25.2 per cent, largely due to
substantially higher gold prices in 2009. There is also a perception
that ‘…the strategies of reserve managers have changed in the last
couple of years since the global financial crisis...’(Natalie, 2011).
Further, she stated that there is much more ‘emphasis now on
risk-management strategies, as opposed to yield enhancement…’
Although central banks do not always publish the reasons for
their reserves management decisions and even when reasons are publicly
announced they are unlikely to fully reflect the long deliberations
that go into develop policy (WGC). Pihalman and Han (2010) however,
stated that central banks reveal ‘...slowly, but surely more and more
information about their reserves management activities typically in
their annual reports...’ Nonetheless, it is not always extremely hard to
surmise the reasons for such accumulation.
Thus, the global financial crisis and the series of events
following the crisis have clearly resulted in increased uncertainty and
the corresponding increase in the demand for gold. More central banks
are buying the precious metal to hedge against the euro and dollar debt
crises (Deutsche Welle, 2011). Further, with down grading of the US
credit rating and the consequent global uncertainty, there are views
that buying trend of gold will continue upwards as long the debt
problems in Europe and the US remain unsolved Eugen Weinberg (2011)
and Natalie (2011). The demand for gold is also coming from
emerging-market nations that are accumulating foreign-exchange reserves
according to Natalie (2011).
Concluding Observations
It is clear from the above analysis that in the wake of global
crisis and the consequent heightened uncertainty, there has been high
demand for gold from the central banks across the globe. It was found
that central banks had either bought more gold or stopped selling their
existing stock and India is no exception. In India’s case, while
foreign reserves increased substantially over the years, the physical
stock of gold as part of official reserves, however, remained stable.
Eventually, gold’s proportion in the total foreign reserves sharply came
down. In fact, even with the latest purchase of gold by the Reserve
Bank, gold accounted to just around 7.9 per cent11
of the forex reserves. This is very small when compared with a sizable
holding by a number of central banks in advanced countries and even
some EMEs as pointed out above. In that context, India’s purchase of
gold as a diversification strategy is fully justified and is in line
with the global trend and still there is scope to increase its holding.
What constitutes the ‘optimum level of gold’ for India is, of course a difficult question to address and unfortunately even international experience is scarce on this question. However, there is strong economic rationale to hold sufficient quantity of gold as part of official reserves, especially during the uncertainty such as the recent global financial crisis going by the historical experience.
India’s recent purchase of 200 tonnes of gold, apparently, did not cause any aberration on the international gold price trend, probably, as gold was not bought from the open market. Similar method can be followed even in future, preferably in smaller quantities. Further, as India is a depository of huge private gold holdings, this can be channelled into official reserves especially those available in the form of coins and biscuits. This will also provide opportunity for the private holders to liquidate gold without much loss as presently banks are not permitted to buy back gold from the public.
In the context of increased degree of uncertainty, especially when the U.S dollar became subject to tough challenges when U.S. attempted to salvage its economy by pumping in with heavy stimulus packages, there was a fear that it may accelerate the process of depreciation of the dollar. This in turn threatened the safety of many country’s dollar-denominated assets. Over and above, the recent downgrading of the U.S credit rating from ‘AAA to AA+’ coupled with the ongoing ‘government debt crisis’ among select European countries pushed up the demand for gold from central banks in general. In these situations, gold continued to maintain its value and therefore it is considered to act as a hedge against loss of wealth.
Thus, the recent global financial crisis, only reiterated that gold as part of foreign exchange reserves continued to play a key role in the macroeconomic management devoid of its erstwhile purely monetary role.
What constitutes the ‘optimum level of gold’ for India is, of course a difficult question to address and unfortunately even international experience is scarce on this question. However, there is strong economic rationale to hold sufficient quantity of gold as part of official reserves, especially during the uncertainty such as the recent global financial crisis going by the historical experience.
India’s recent purchase of 200 tonnes of gold, apparently, did not cause any aberration on the international gold price trend, probably, as gold was not bought from the open market. Similar method can be followed even in future, preferably in smaller quantities. Further, as India is a depository of huge private gold holdings, this can be channelled into official reserves especially those available in the form of coins and biscuits. This will also provide opportunity for the private holders to liquidate gold without much loss as presently banks are not permitted to buy back gold from the public.
In the context of increased degree of uncertainty, especially when the U.S dollar became subject to tough challenges when U.S. attempted to salvage its economy by pumping in with heavy stimulus packages, there was a fear that it may accelerate the process of depreciation of the dollar. This in turn threatened the safety of many country’s dollar-denominated assets. Over and above, the recent downgrading of the U.S credit rating from ‘AAA to AA+’ coupled with the ongoing ‘government debt crisis’ among select European countries pushed up the demand for gold from central banks in general. In these situations, gold continued to maintain its value and therefore it is considered to act as a hedge against loss of wealth.
Thus, the recent global financial crisis, only reiterated that gold as part of foreign exchange reserves continued to play a key role in the macroeconomic management devoid of its erstwhile purely monetary role.
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