Wednesday, August 7, 2013

correlation of gold and reserves

the word may soon look like the roles reversed and other countries will have a more consolidated position of gold as the report below shows china and Russia increasing their gold reserves right now this is how the gold stacks up between countries



by the end of this decade I see Russia and China in the 2nd and 3rd position considering the us has NOT sold any gold however if US GOV. has then they may be very close to 9  or 10



GNS+RESEARCH


Russia & China Want Gold To Diversify Massive Foreign Exchange Reserves
Despite increased purchases of gold from both countries, they are expected to continue buying the yellow metal.

One of the biggest factors driving the bull market in gold over the past decade was consistent buying by central banks. After 21-straight years of selling, central banks in aggregate became net buyers for the first time in 2010. In 2012, they bought the most gold in 50 years.
It may be surprising to some that the most significant of these central bank buyers is Russia. The Bank of Russia has purchased almost 20 million troy ounces of gold over the past decade, most of that taking place since 2007.
Russia now holds the eighth-largest gold reserves in the world, representing 9 percent of its total foreign exchange reserves. That of course leaves more room for gold buying by Russia should it choose to diversify its reserves even further.
Russia Gold Reserves
Russia Gold Holdings
Another big central bank buyer over the past several years has been China. The country, which does not regularly report on its holdings, also purchased close to 20 million troy ounces over the past decade. However, in China, gold holdings represent a mere 1.7 percent of its whopping $3.4 trillion of foreign exchange reserves, leaving ample room for diversification.
China Gold Reserves
China Gold Holdings
Importantly, the gold buying by Russia, China and others adds a sense of legitimacy to the yellow metal’s store-of-value characteristic. It’s not merely “gold bugs” that have interest in the metal, but powerful national governments as well.

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