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EE_
19th October 2013, 05:38 PM
China’s London-Zurich-Hong Kong gold conduit — a major financial coup d’etat
Posted on October 18, 2013 by MK

by Michael J. Kosares

The United Kingdom’s gold exports to Switzerland jumped from 85 tonnes to 1,016 tonnes in the first eight months of 2013 — a twelve times increase. Some bullion market watchers attribute the huge increase to withdrawals or sales from ETFs — an explanation that covers only half the story…….if that.

Switzerland, according to the Koos Jansen website, has exported nearly 500 tonnes of gold to Hong Kong through July, 2013. Hong Kong, in turn, has exported over 1200 tonnes of gold to the Chinese mainland over the same period. Now, with this report of ramped-up exports from the United Kingdom, another piece of the puzzle falls into place and we begin to get a fairly clear picture what these gold mobilizations entail. Switzerland and Hong Kong are acting as a conduit of western gold on its way to China — and probably Chinese central bank reserves.

To what extent this gold mobilization is the result of some yet-to-be-identified external pressure on London’s bullion banks, or simply business as usual, remains to be determined, but gold movements of this size usually do not occur in a vacuum. Hedge funds have been in the gold ETF liquidation mode since April, at the behest, it seems, of certain bullion banks that have issued generalized ETF sell recommendations to their clientele (which includes the funds). The ETF selling has been blamed repeatedly for the rapid drop in the price. If all of this has been a ploy to drive down the price on paper and channel substantial amounts of physical gold to China, who is the winner in this game and who is the loser? And why is it being done?

The gold market is incurably opaque (no matter how diligent or persistent the arguments to the contrary that it isn’t or that it should not be), and that is probably why so many are intrigued by it. Yet, at the same time, those who innocently own gold for asset preservation purposes can rest assured that they will never become collateral damage in these affairs as long as they do not allow themselves to lose patience or forget the reasons why they purchased gold in the first place.

Gold is never sought by those who think all is well with the world. It is sought by those who believe that things could go wrong, or indeed, that things have already gone very badly. That true believer might be someone of incredible private wealth, as was the case with Bernard Baruch in the 1930s, or it might be a great nation-state like Germany or China today. When the sitting Secretary of the Treasury asked Bernard Baruch why he was buying so much gold, the reply came quickly that he “was commencing to have doubts about the currency.” China and Germany, no doubt, are acting on doubts of their own. Up until today, we were unaware of the degree to which those doubts had manifested themselves in the hidden corridors of the world gold market. . . .Now we know. In the first eight months of 2013 China produced 270 tonnes of gold from its mines, and theoretically almost four times that amount through its London – Zurich – Hong Kong gold conduit. In future years, this will likely be considered a major financial coup d’etat.

http://www.usagold.com/cpmforum/2013/10/18/chinas-london-zurich-hong-kong-gold-conduit-a-major-financial-coup-detat/

gunDriller
20th October 2013, 11:18 AM
they have to send the Gold to Switzerland, where the refineries are, to make sure each bar is real.


also, China seems to like smaller bars. not sure which size. Kilo ?

mamboni
20th October 2013, 11:40 AM
they have to send the Gold to Switzerland, where the refineries are, to make sure each bar is real.


also, China seems to like smaller bars. not sure which size. Kilo ?

Yes, kilo. I am converting all of my cash reserves held in Keogh into Chinese Yuan. My horse sense is telling me that we have just past a major bell weather event in the dollar and gold. I think we are at a general bottom in gold and an interim top in the dollar. For the long term, I see inexorable rise in the gold and mining indices, a rising yuan, and a declining dollar. I am positioning accordingly. Silver at today's ridiculously paper-suppressed prices is a no-brainer buy and hold.

gunDriller
20th October 2013, 02:58 PM
Silver at today's ridiculously paper-suppressed prices is a no-brainer buy and hold.

why would you want to buy silver below the cost of production ? /sarc


i still wonder if any of the miners went onto the spot market for a week or 2 there. just bought 1000 ounce bars for $19.50 and delivered (?) them to customers with whom they had contracted to be paid $21.50.

mamboni
20th October 2013, 06:24 PM
why would you want to buy silver below the cost of production ? /sarc


i still wonder if any of the miners went onto the spot market for a week or 2 there. just bought 1000 ounce bars for $19.50 and delivered (?) them to customers with whom they had contracted to be paid $21.50.

Right, the miners should be dehedging like crazy. Silver loses them money to mine!