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September 4, 2015Key Gold Headlines

Foreign Central Banks Yanking Gold Out Of Fed’s Vaults

Foreign central banks want their gold back and they are pulling it out of Federal Reserve bank vaults.

According to a recent Federal Reserve report on its foreign official assets, physical gold holdings fell 9.6 tons last month to 5,950 tons. Total foreign physical gold held by the Fed now sits at just over $8 billion, down more than $67 million since January. If that figure sounds low to you, it is. Since 1973, the Fed has valued its gold based upon a statutory $42.22 price per ounce.

Fed Gold Custody July 2015_1_0

Federal Reserve foreign gold holdings dropped every month this year except June, when they held steady. Put in broader perspective, foreign central banks have withdrawn 192 tons of gold over the past year, and 246 tons since the January 2014.

This reflects a continuing trend of foreign gold repatriation.

In early 2013, the German central bank (Bundesbank) announced it would begin the process of repatriating massive amounts of its physical gold reserves back into the country. The Bundesbank repatriated 120 metric tons of gold in 2014. In the fall of that same year, the Netherlands followed suit, taking delivery of some of its physical gold holdings from the New York Federal Reserve Bank. The Dutch central bank increased its domestic holdings of physical bullion from 11% of total gold reserves to 31%.

Last May, Austria became the most recent country to announce plans to repatriate gold. According to the Guardian, the Austrian National Bank plans to bring home to 80% of its entire gold stock – “after auditors warned against the risks of keeping a majority in a foreign country.” The bank will fly gold bars back to Vienna over the next five years, raising its in-country stocks to 140 tons.

Even the state of Texas wants to bring its gold home. A bill signed by Gov. Greg Abbott in June creates a state gold depository and sets the stage to repatriate $1 billion of gold back into the state.

In the midst of uncertain currency wars, countries want to bring this essential reserve asset back home in case of financial emergencies. Some analysts also see it as a sign of distrust of the Fed, and an indication that the Federal Reserve may not hold as much bullion as it claims. The continued exodus of gold from the Fed’s vaults seems to support this analysis.

As Matthew Lynn wrote for MarketWatch last December, fear of a massive currency crisis is the primary reason so many countries would want their gold back on sovereign soil.

The point about having gold on your own soil is that it is an insurance policy against a chaotic return to national currencies. The fact that so many countries seem to want that insurance tells you something important about the euro — and it is hardly comforting. They still think there is a real possibility of collapse…There are not many circumstances in which holding a big stash of gold on your own territory matters very much. But one of them is the sudden, chaotic reorganization of your currency. If a country were to introduce a new currency overnight then if it could be backed by some gold right from the start that would give it some instant credibility in the markets. Repatriating gold only makes sense as a way of preparing for that to happen.”

Holding gold in case of financial crisis not only makes sense for central banks, but also for individuals. Gold historically preserves wealth and provides financial security in times of economic chaos. Peter Schiff’s Why Buy Gold Now? report provides in-depth analysis on the US economy and the gold market.

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