IMF To Sell Gold Stocks

By Glenn Dyer | More Articles by Glenn Dyer

World gold markets are bound for a period of uncertainty just at a time when the price seems to be recovering form the sharp sell off of 10 days or so ago.

Futures prices traded around $US926 an ounce yesterday, compared to the all time high reached in March of $1030 an ounce, but up from the recent low of $US888 an ounce.

But an International Monetary Fund proposal to sell 403.3 tonnes of its gold reserves as part of a move to revamp its sagging finances, will inject a note of uncertainty into the market.

The financial overhaul was revealed in Washington yesterday, after US markets had closed, ahead of the spring meetings of the IMF and the World Bank later this week.

The sale, amounting to some 12% of its gold reserves, could yield around $US11 billion, which would go a long way to supporting the financial reorganisation of the institution as it seeks to surmount a downturn in lending to troubled countries, its main income source.

But the IMF is adamant it won’t sell gold and disrupt the world market.

The downturn in revenue has come because of the improvement in emerging country economies (the so-called BRIC countries, Brazil, Russia, India and China) which have been recipients of IMF aid in the past.

So to have the next tier of developing countries, such as booming Turkey and Argentina and a host of other smaller countries with strong performing economies, and no need of assistance, especially cash, from the Fund.

IMF Managing director Dominique Strauss-Kahn said in a statement the Fund would use the funds to help shore up IMF finances and create a new $US6 billion endowment with more diverse investments to generate income.

"An endowment would be created with the profits from the limited sale of 403.3 metric tons of the," he said. "If approved, gold sales would be conducted in a transparent manner with strong safeguards to ensure that they do not add to official sales and avoid any risk of market disruption."

IMF officials told the media in briefings that the Fund would not dump metal on the market and would take several years to sell it: one official estimated the Fund could make around $US850 an ounce over time from its sales.

The Fund’s gold sales will be coordinated with current and future Central Bank Gold Agreements (CBGA). Under the current CGBA, a group of European central banks have agreed to limit their gold sales to no more than 500 metric tons annually.

The IMF website says IMF holds 103.4 million ounces (3,217 tonnes) of gold, making it the third largest official holder of gold. The gold is valued on its balance sheet at about $US9.2 billion on the basis of historical cost. The market value of this gold was $US95.2 billion as of February 20, 2008.

"The announcement comes with the IMF in the midst of an intense effort to trim costs and slash jobs as its lending is scaled back, with some countries refusing the IMF’s conditional aid.

"The IMF faces a budget shortfall of some 140 million US dollars for the fiscal year 2008 that ends on April 30.

"The sale would affect some 13 million ounces of the IMF’s 103.4 million ounces of gold reserves.

"The IMF’s finances have become unsustainable following a large decline in credit outstanding in recent years. In the absence of measures, an income shortfall of $165 million in FY2007 is expected to widen to about $400 million by FY2010.

"One of the income sources the Committee proposed is the creation of an endowment funded from the proceeds of strictly limited gold sales to be carried out within safeguards to avoid disruption of the gold market," The Fund said in a statement on its website.

Despite the assurances, traders say the sale process could have a dramatic impact on the gold market.

The recent surge in prices to well above $US800 an ounce has curtailed demand from the important jewellery trades in India and the Middle East. The fall off in demand worsened in the last quarter of 2007, according to figures from the World Gold Council, and has continued into February this year.

Gold production is falling because of easing output from Australia and especially South Africa. China is producing more and is now the world’s biggest producer, but that won’t be enough to make up the shortfall. Scrap supplies are rising as people cash in old jewellery and other things with gold metal in them. More and more gold is also being soaked up by Exchange Trade Funds like the State Street vehicle which is now a major holder of gold.

Around $US6.6 billion would be used to create the endowment.

The IMF said in the statement that its executive board agreed to revamp the institution’s income model from one that primarily relies on lending to one that "generates funds from various sources" (hence the endowment fund).

The expansion of the fund’s investment authority is contingent on a charter amendment that would need legislative action in most member countries. In addition, approval by the US Congress is required for the US executive director to vote for the gold sale.

The reform plan requires approval by 85% of the voting power of the institution’s 185 member nations, which is dominated by the US.

Mr Strauss-Kahn said the executive board’s proposal for a new financial framework was "a landmark agreement that will put the institution on solid financial footing and modernize the IMF’s structure and operations".

"We have made difficult, but necessary choices to close the projected income shortfall and put the Fund’s finances on a sustainable basis," he said.

The investment policies would include safeguards to ensure that the broadened investment authority "does not give rise even to perceived conflicts of interest".

The board is considering the medium-term budget for the financial years 2009-2011,

About Glenn Dyer

Glenn Dyer has been a finance journalist and TV producer for more than 40 years. He has worked at Maxwell Newton Publications, Queensland Newspapers, AAP, The Australian Financial Review, The Nine Network and Crikey.

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