Thursday, November 12, 2009

India, China Central Banks Rather Have Gold Than Dollars

Roman denarius

Image via Wikipedia

 By Byron King

Let’s review the big picture for gold. What’s going on? And what are people saying?

For much of 2009, gold traded in the range of low-mid $900 per ounce. There was a dip over the summer, with a strong upswing starting in September. Gold is now trading well over $1,000 per ounce, in fact just under $1,100.

Turns out that the government of India was buying gold in mid-October. Over a two-week span, the central bank of India bought 200 tonnes (metric tons) of gold from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) at an average price of $1,045. The IMF — over which the U.S. holds veto power for most actions — got approval to sell the gold from — where else? — the U.S. Congress, last spring.

Previously, the government of India held 350 tonnes of gold reserves. This 200-tonne purchase is a 57% increase in India’s reserves. There’s joy in India, I’ll bet. (It makes me wonder what the Pakistanis think, now that their large neighbor has both nuclear weapons AND a growing gold hoard.)

India, China Central Banks Rather Have Gold Than Dollars

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