Gold futures for December delivery gained $4.20, or 0.3 percent, to settle at $1,606.60 an ounce on the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange. |
Demand for gold by central banks and official sector institutions were
more than double the level reported a year ago, as emerging market
central banks continue to gobble up gold due to concerns about fiat
currencies, such as the U.S. dollar and especially the euro, according
to World Gold Council data released Thursday.
Gold
reserves at central banks increased by 158 metric tons, a rise of more
than 130 percent over the corresponding period last year and the largest
quarterly net purchase by this sector since it became a net buyer of
the yellow metal in the second quarter of 2009. The official sector
accounted for 16 percent of the total gold demand of 990 tons in the
second quarter.
Should central banks continue to buy gold at the current rate and add roughly another 250 tons between now and December, official sector gold purchases would likely total around 500 tons this year, which will be a record since 1964, said Marcus Grubb, managing director at WGC
Should central banks continue to buy gold at the current rate and add roughly another 250 tons between now and December, official sector gold purchases would likely total around 500 tons this year, which will be a record since 1964, said Marcus Grubb, managing director at WGC
Purchases in the first half of the year totaled 254 tons, up 25 percent from 203 tons in the same period last year.
"You'll see central banks to continue make major contributions on the
demand side of the market, though it's mainly emerging country central
banks doing the purchasing," Grubb said.
Central banks in emerging economies have been largely net buyers of
gold over the past couple of years, as they looked to diversify further
their reserve assets holdings due to concerns of overexposure to the
dollar, the euro and sovereign bonds. Before 2009, however, central
banks had been net sellers of gold bullion for around two decades.
"To some degree, central banks are worried about sovereign bonds not
being as much of a low-risk asset as they used to be," Grubb said. "Gold
is liquid and has low correlation with other asset classes. It's a
natural choice for a lot of central banks."
Central banks that bolstered their holdings during the period
included the National Bank of Kazakhstan and the central banks of the
Philippines, Russia and Ukraine.
The National Bank of Kazakhstan stated in July that it had increased
its 2012 target for gold purchases from 25 tons to 26 tons. The bank has
previously said that it plans to buy the country's entire domestic
production over the next two to three years in order to reduce its
reliance on the U.S. dollar as a reserve asset, confirming that it is
targeting an allocation to gold of 15 percent of its foreign exchange
reserves.
Following the confirmation in June that it had purchased over 32 tons
of gold in March, the central bank of the Philippines made no net
changes to its reserves throughout the second quarter. The bank's stated
policy of buying local mine production remains in place and reserves as
at the end of June stood at a provisional 194.2 tons, equal to around
13 percent of total reserves.
Russia's
program of buying saw the central bank add a further 22 tons to its
reserves during the April to June period. Total gold reserves at the end
of the period stood at around 920 tons, roughly equal to 9 percent of
total reserves.
The National Bank of Ukraine
appears to have accelerated a program of very small sporadic purchases,
which it has made over recent years, with four consecutive monthly
additions to its gold reserves since March of this year. These
transactions have been small in size, with purchases in the second
quarter totaling 3.6 tons, but relative to total holdings of 32.8 tons
this represents a significant percentage increase in the bank's gold
reserves.
Small purchases were also made by a range of central banks across
Europe and South America, including Serbia, Guatemala and the Kyrgyz
Republic.
Gold futures for December delivery gained $4.20, or 0.3 percent, to settle at $1,606.60 an ounce on the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange.
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