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Russia's leading global
'stealth demand' for gold
By Ambrose Evans-Pritchard
The Telegraph, London
Monday, June 5, 2006
The world's big money
brigade is snapping up gold bullion at eight times the rate originally
thought, according to a report by UBS, the world's biggest gold trader.
The huge sums entering precious metals below the radar are likely to help to
put a floor under the gold price after the dramatic fall of $112 an ounce in
late May -- the sharpest correction since the bull market began five years
ago.
The Swiss bank said information from its trading floor suggested that funds
and investors were allocating 20 percent of their commodity portfolios to
precious metals.
This is far more than the index tracking funds run by Goldman Sachs, Dow
Jones-AIG, and others, typically taken to be a guide to overall investment
flows.
UBS said these indexes gave a deeply misleading impression, obscuring a
silent shift of funds from oil into gold.
The Goldman Sachs GSCI index, for example, has a gold and silver weighting
of just 2.27 percent, compared to 73 percent for energy.
"If our traders' experience is representative of trends in the wider market,
this has very important implications for metals investment," said the bank's
gold expert, John Reade. The UBS gold reports are watched closely by the
markets. The Zurich bank is the world's leading gold trader and manages the
biggest known stash of private client wealth, surpassing $1,000 billion.
The extra volume in gold buying has been channelled through the London
Bullion Market Association, eclipsing the Comex futures market in New York
usually monitored by speculators for clues.
Gold recovered from lows of $618.50 an ounce last week to end at $637.30
after weak US jobs data renewed fears of a dollar slide.
"The sort of money that is chasing this market higher is not hot money,"
Ross Norman, director of the BullionDesk.com.
"It is slow, steady investment by pension funds and long-term buyers.
Anybody who thinks this market is about to head sharply lower is reading it
badly," he said.
Mr. Norman said there was a chronic dearth of new mine supply across the
world due to eco-regulations and a lack of discoveries.
Output in South Africa, the world's biggest supplier, fell to 10.9 percent
in the first quarter of 2006 despite high prices. The country's production
has reached its lowest level since 1923. "It's becoming very hard to get
gold out of the ground," he said.
Oil states armed with an estimated current account surplus of $480 billion
in 2006 are thought to be feeding the "stealth demand" for bullion, led by
Russia.
President Vladimir Putin, a frequent critic of dollar hegemony, has ordered
the Russian central bank to raise the gold share of foreign reserves from 5
percent to 10 percent.
Russia's reserves have surged to $237 billion -- the world's fourth biggest
-- after rising 61 percent in 2004 and 40 percent in 2005. With a current
account surplus of 10 percent of GDP, it must sweep up a big chunk of global
gold output just to stop its bullion share of reserves from falling.
In China, monetary committee member Yu Yongding last week issued the most
explicit call to date for Beijing to diversify its $875 billion reserves
into gold to protect against a tumbling dollar. "We need to use some of the
reserves to buy other assets such as gold and strategic resources such as
oil," he said.
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