While the highly "sophisticated" traders that make up the gold market
continue to buy or sell the precious metal based on whether the Fed will
or will not do the NEW QE tomorrow (or just because, like Bruno Iskil,
they have a massive balance sheet, and can create margin position out of
thin air with impunity), China continues to do one thing.
Buy.
Because while earlier today we were wondering (rhetorically, of course)
what China is doing with all that excess trade surplus if it is not
recycling it back into Treasurys, now we once again find out that
instead of purchasing US paper, Beijing continues to buy non-US gold, in
the form of 68 tons in imports from Hong Kong in the month of June. The
year to date total (6 months)? 383 tons.
In other
words, in half a year China, whose official total tally is still a
massively underrepresented 1054 tons, has imported more gold than the
official gold reserves of Portugal, Venezuela, Saudi Arabia, the UK, and
so on, and whose YTD imports alone make it the 14th largest holder of
gold in the world. Realistically, by now China, which hasn't provided an
honest gold reserve holdings update to the IMF in years, most certainly
has more gold than the IMF, and its 2814 tons, itself.
Of course, the moment the PBOC does announce its official updated gold
stash, a gold price in the mid-$1000 range will be a long gone memory.
Here is the latest breakdown of gold reserves by Top 20 countries via the WGC:
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