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October 22, 2012

What is China really doing in the gold markets? - Mineweb.com

Is #China building its #gold reserves surreptitiously? The balance of probabilities suggests it is - and perhaps at a faster rate than many would contemplate.

What is China really doing in the gold markets?

Author: Lawrence Williams
Posted: Monday , 22 Oct 2012
LONDON (Mineweb) - 

Perhaps the biggest conundrum facing gold investors is China.  What is it really doing?  Is it building gold reserves surreptitiously?  Is it buying gold on the dips thus creating a floor price?  The answer is that we don't know for sure as the giant Asian economy plays its cards pretty close to its chest.  So all we are left with is informed speculation gleaned through trying to pick up guidance from public utterances by senior Chinese officials and, in trying to make sense of the gold import statistics via Hong Kong, believed to be the primary route for gold coming into China.  However, one does not know for sure if perhaps there are other channels through which gold is imported as well.  We are reliant wholly on what China actually tells us, but Chinese data is not exactly reckoned to be transparent and the general belief is that the statistics only tell the outside world what China's powers-that-be want us to believe.
So, what are the ‘facts' as we know them?  First and foremost, China is believed to be the world's largest gold producer, but here again we do not know for sure whether the announced gold production statistics includes those from a host of small mines which fall outside the general reporting framework, or whether it includes the byproduct gold from concentrate imports for the country's huge smelting and refining sector.  On gold imports we really don't know how much of this, if any, goes into government warehouses and how much is actually bought by individuals.  There is plenty of anecdotal evidence of strong demand from the Chinese public, but actual figures setting out the total amount purchased by this sector are somewhat lacking.  Likewise, we do not know how much of China's own gold production is taken up by government and how much enters the general markets, if any.  All we know is that China does not export gold - it only imports it thus soaking up a significant element of global gold output like a sponge.  What comes in doesn't come out again!
If we take Chinese statistics at face value, then all this imported and home produced gold is taken up by individuals as the country's official gold reserves, as reported, have not risen at all since 2009 and total only 1,054 tonnes - less than 2% of China's foreign reserves, a minuscule amount in relation to the gold holdings of the world's biggest global economies like the U.S. and Germany both of which hold over 70% of their reserves in gold.  But, and this is indeed a big but, in April 2009 China raised its official reserve figure by over 450 tonnes (by transferring it from a non-reportable pot into its official reserve) - is it doing the same again and raising its reserves without reporting any increase to the outside world?  The likelihood is that it is, and it is possible that the increase in the reserve is substantial.
So what would be the reason for China not reporting any increase in its official reserve figure?  The Chinese hold a huge amount of U.S. dollar related paper in its total forex reserve - estimated at around $3 trillion.  If one follows the occasional statements from senior Chinese officials they feel that these dollars are devaluing through the U.S. Quantitative Easing programmes and will continue to do so, so are keen to diversify out of dollar holdings into ‘currencies' that, as they see it, maintain their value - like gold.  If China announces a big gold reserve increase, the price of gold would likely rise sharply on the news, which would mean it would cost China more and more to increase its gold reserve.  It thus makes sense for it to build its gold reserves at reasonable prices rather than have to buy at far higher price levels which would prevail if it was officially announced that its gold reserves had doubled, trebled, or even more.
If this is indeed the case, what level of gold in its reserve is China seeking to reach, and how quickly can it get there?  There have been pointers to this in various statements by senior officials and it is thought there could be an initial target of around 5,000 tonnes - which would still only bring them up to around 8% of its forex holdings.  And, perhaps a long term target of double this which would at least bring the figure up to around the same level as a country like Switzerland as a percentage of forex reserves.  With its own annual gold output at around 350 tonnes, assuming all this is taken into reserves, it would take ten years or more to achieve the initial target alone.  But there is a feeling that its gold reserves may, in fact, be growing faster than that by taking in some of the imported gold as well.  But how much?
Another factor which demonstrates China's gold thirst is the number of Chinese companies moving into buying offshore gold producers - and given that, in effect, all these companies are state-owned or controlled (as is virtually any significant  company) it does also demonstrate  the overall official policy on gold.  Some feel that China is building its reserves far faster than many think with a long term aim to allow the yuan eventually become the world's reserve currency replacing the U.S. dollar, with all the trade advantages such a change would bring.  And to do this, so the pundits argue, it feels that its currency needs a strong gold backing.  This day may be some years ahead but China, with its autocratic political system plans for the long term, while Western democracies seem mostly to only plan for the time until the next election.

Lawrence (Lawrie) Williams has been involved with both the technical and the financial end of the mining sector for over 40 years, formerly CEO of top mining industry business publisher, Mining Journal Limited, he is Mineweb's General Manager and Editorial Director.
Email: lawrie@mineweb.com

 Read the article online at Mineweb here: What is China really doing in the gold markets? - POLITICAL ECONOMY - Mineweb.com Mineweb

October 20, 2012

Canada blocks $5.2 billion #Petronas bid for #Progress Energy | Reuters


Canada has blocked Malaysian state oil firm Petronas's C$5.17 billion (3.2 billion pounds) bid for gas producer Progress Energy Resources (PRQ.TO: Quote, Profile, Research), throwing the country's energy sector into turmoil.

Canada blocks $5.2 billion Petronas bid for Progress Energy

Photo
1:07pm BST
TORONTO/KUALA LUMPUR (Reuters) - Canada has blocked Malaysian state oil firm Petronas's C$5.17 billion (3.2 billion pounds) bid for gas producer Progress Energy Resources (PRQ.TO: QuoteProfileResearch), throwing the country's energy sector into turmoil.
The surprise move could signal problems for Chinese oil group CNOOC's (0883.HK: QuoteProfileResearch) C$15.1 billion offer for oil producer Nexen (NXY.TO: QuoteProfileResearch) and, longer term, weigh on other Canadian firms hoping for foreign investment to tap their vast energy reserves.
Also, any rejection of the CNOOC bid would likely damage trade ties Canada has been trying to build with China, and would underline political sensitivity to Chinese corporate expansion in North America.
The government, which has said C$630 billion investment is needed over the next decade, has been trying to balance concerns over the deals with a need for foreign investment.
Canada's announcement late on Friday, minutes before a deadline, was a blow to Petronas PETR.UL whose domestic oil supplies are shrinking and which has been seeking to boost its resources beyond Malaysia and volatile areas such as Sudan.
The bid for Progress had not been expected to run into hurdles in a review process that asks whether a deal is of "net benefit" to Canada.
Petronas, which said on Saturday it was not ready to comment, has 30 days to make its offer more palatable. It was not clear what it could put on the table.
"I have sent a notice letter to Petronas indicating that I am not satisfied that the proposed investment is likely to be of net benefit to Canada," industry minister Christian Paradis said in a statement.
The Petronas deal attracted scrutiny after CNOOC made its bid for Nexen. Some members of Canada's governing Conservative Party are wary of the CNOOC offer, in part because of what they say are unfair Chinese business practices.
Earlier this month, Prime Minister Stephen Harper said China's "very different" political and economic systems were a concern. A CNOOC spokeswoman in Beijing would not comment.
WARNING
Last month, China's ambassador to Canada said the government should not allow domestic politics to affect its decision on whether to approve CNOOC's bid.
South of Canada's border, Chinese firms have had difficulty doing business. The United States House of Representatives' Intelligence Committee issued a report earlier this month saying companies should stop doing business with Chinese groups Huawei and ZTE (000063.SZ: QuoteProfileResearch) (0763.HK: QuoteProfileResearch) over security concerns.
On Thursday, the chief executive of U.S. aircraft maker Hawker Beechcraft, whose $1.79 billion sale to a Chinese firm fell through, said China-bashing by U.S. presidential candidates may have contributed to failure of the talks.
The United States has long been the largest market for Canadian energy exports. But with growing U.S. oil output from unconventional sources and the rejection this year of an initial application on the controversial Keystone XL pipeline project, Canada has been forced to try to build bridges with Asian markets that would welcome its energy supplies.
CNOOC, which has won approval from Nexen shareholders, has said it will retain all Nexen employees and make Calgary the headquarters for its Americas operations.
Petronas had also attempted to highlight the benefit its deal offered to Canada, saying it would combine its Canadian business with that of Progress and retain all staff.
"Maybe Canada is using this to attach more conditions to the Nexen deal," said Gordon Kwan, head of energy research at Mirae Asset Securities in Hong Kong. He thinks CNOOC will get the go-ahead.
Progress's share price had doubled since talk of the possible Petronas bid emerged in April, closing at C$21.65 on Friday. Nexen stock has also surged since CNOOC announced its bid in July, rising 48 percent to C$25.15.
Canada last blocked a foreign takeover in 2010, when it stunned markets by rejecting BHP Billiton's (BHP.AX: QuoteProfileResearch) (BLT.L: QuoteProfileResearch) $39 billion bid for Potash Corp (POT.TO:QuoteProfileResearch), the world's largest fertiliser maker.
BHP also had a 30-day period to come back with additional undertakings but withdrew its offer, sensing the bid was unlikely to be approved in the face of political opposition.
BIG DEALS?
Canada is grappling with concerns that approval of the deals could spark a flurry of takeovers of energy companies - the country is home to the world's third-largest proven oil reserves, most of them in the western province of Alberta.
Petronas, Malaysia's only Fortune 500 company, made a big push into Canada's shale gas sector last year when it bought a $1.1 billion stake in a field from Progress.
Petronas first bid for Progress in June to gain control of its 800,000 acres holdings in the Montney shale-gas region of northeastern British Columbia, reserves that could feed a planned liquefied natural gas facility on the Pacific coast.
It raised its initial offer of C$20.45 per share to C$22 in July after a rival bid from an unnamed suitor.
As its domestic supplies start to dwindle, Petronas has been expanding abroad, investing in Sudanese oil, South African petrol stations and European liquefied natural gas.
It had seen the Progress deal as a crucial step to increase its presence in a more stable country after clashes on the border between South Sudan and Sudan this year all but shut its pipelines there.
On Thursday, Canada's broadcast regulator blocked BCE's C$3 billion bid for Astral Media (ACMa.TO: QuoteProfileResearch), saying the deal would give too much power to BCE, Canada's biggest telecoms company and the owner of numerous TV and radio assets.
(Additional reporting by Charlie Zhu in Hong Kong; Editing by dan Lalor and Raju Gopalakrishnan)
© Thomson Reuters 2011. All rights reserved. 


Read the article online here:  Canada blocks $5.2 billion Petronas bid for Progress Energy | Reuters

October 15, 2012

`You can print money as much as you like but you can`t print #gold` - Mineweb.com

'You can print money as much as you like but you can't print gold'

A quote from a Swiss gold refiner/trader puts the case for gold as sound money very succinctly and coupled with the suggestion that it is a Giffen good, bodes well for further price rises.
Author: Lawrence Williams
Posted: Monday , 15 Oct 2012 
LONDON (Mineweb) -
The title of this article is very much a truism which says much about the position gold has held as an international standard for many centuries and why, ultimately, it will hold its position as the monetary yardstick against which all global currencies in this fiat money world will ultimately be measured, and fail to pass muster.  Indeed if some far cleverer analysts and economists than I are to be listened to, these currencies will collapse into a morass of hyperinflation unless the money printing can somehow be brought under control.  With QE to infinity policies currently in place in most of the world's key financial blocs, the likelihood of such controls coming into place before at least one major currency does collapse is becoming more and more remote.  And if one does collapse the dominoes could rapidly start to fall plunging the world into financial Armageddon where the middle classes in particular will have their wealth totally destroyed.  One sincerely hopes that somehow this doomsday scenario can be avoided, but it's as well to be prepared just in case.
I am indebted to an article on Swiss dominance in global gold refining on website www.swissinfo.ch  for the quote used in the title - (from Frédéric Panizzutti, spokesman for MKS (Switzerland) SA, a Swiss company, which specialises in gold trading and which owns the Pamp gold refinery).  Interestingly, Switzerland is a nation which is not amongst the principal money printing areas of the world, although by recently tying its currency to the Euro it is increasingly losing control over its financial destiny, potentially eroding many years of Swiss financial propriety.  It has been finding that the strength of the Swiss Franc from these years has been a limiting factor on its exports, but many feel that its attempts to keep its currency parity stable (or debasing it as some would say) to aid its competitiveness in its biggest export market will prove impossible to maintain long term.
So, while it is possible to continue churning out additional paper money, seemingly ad infinitum, the global gold stock can only grow by a few small percentage points a year which, in  the days when currencies were tied to gold, gave them a huge degree of stability.  Nowadays, continual expansion of the money supply, with no backing, has ultimately to be inflationary - and the more the money supply is expanded, by whatever means, the more likely is it that this inflation will turn into hyperinflation.
What the commentators who call that gold is in a bubble and is hugely overpriced do not take into account is that gold may not really have risen much in value at all - but is primarily reflecting the debasement of all the major currencies - even the Swiss Franc now it has been tied to the Euro.  As noted above, gold is the ultimate monetary yardstick, which is why governments and central banks don't like it as it shows up their policies for what they really are.  For years, institutions like the U.S. Fed and most central bankers have publicly stated that gold is effectively an irrelevance - yet conversely they continue to hold huge amounts of it.  The odds are that they also massage the price to keep it from surging, in the same way that governments try to manipulate anything which can show them up in a bad light.
That Britain's Gordon Brown sold off 60% of the UK's gold reserves back in 1999-2002 when the gold price was at rock bottom was that this self-styled statesman and ‘saviour of the world' from a Scottish backwater  - or perhaps rather a misguided historian who obviously learned little from his historical studies - was, as a relatively raw Chancellor of the Exchequer (Finance Minister), totally misled by the world's central banking elite into ordering this sale at a price (forever to be known as the Brown Bottom) in what in retrospect was a disastrous decision from the U.K.'s economic point of view.  OK, it is easy to be wise after the event, but perhaps Brown was actually the patsy in a global scheme to downplay the role of gold, and led into doing this by central bankers who had no wish to put their own gold reserves on the auction block.
Now central bankers are again buying gold - particularly those from nations in areas which, for the most part, have historically regarded gold as the ultimate store of wealth.  Indeed with China notably circumspect about what it is actually prepared to announce regarding its gold holdings, central bank purchases could well be far higher than official figures would appear to show.
What this all means for the gold price at the moment is that it is pretty much underpinned with some big buying coming in on dips in price, while each recent upwards surge has seen consolidation at higher levels (involving a small drift backwards) followed by a further surge.  On this basis one would anticipate the $1800 level being attacked again on the next vaguely pro-gold piece of news to surface and the current fallback being fairly short-lived.
In his latest Thunder Road Report, Paul Mylchreest, who is always worth reading, poses the question Is gold a Giffen good? - the definition of such being "one which people paradoxically consume more of as the price rises, violating the law of demand. In normal situations, as the price of a good rises, the substitution effect causes consumers to purchase less of it and more of substitute goods. In the Giffen good situation, the income effect dominates, leading people to buy more of the good, even as its price rises" - Wikipedia.  The pattern of gold ETF holdings, and now Central Bank purchases, suggests that gold should nowadays be so classified and, if this is the case, as the price rises demand may well continue to increase, thus driving the price ever higher given the tiny increase in global supply each successive year.  We shall see.


About Lawrence (Lawrie) Williams

Lawrence (Lawrie) Williams has been involved with both the technical and the financial end of the mining sector for over 40 years, formerly CEO of top mining industry business publisher, Mining Journal Limited, he is Mineweb's General Manager and Editorial Director.
Email: lawrie@mineweb.com


`You can print money as much as you like but you can`t print gold` - WHATS NEW - Mineweb.com Mineweb


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