What If the Shortage of Gold in London Isn’t a Tariff Scare but … A Shortage of Gold?

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by Chris Powell, Gold Seek:

If reports recently from the Financial Times and Reuters are correct —

https://www.gata.org/node/23596

https://www.gata.org/node/23598

— there is a severe shortage of gold — the metallic kind rather than the paper kind — in the London market, caused by the desire of bullion banks to ship a lot of metal to the United States before President Trump imposed tariffs on imports of the monetary metals.

There are several problems with this scenario.

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First is that gold is not a commodity or consumer good, the things Trump has been talking about subjecting to tariffs, but money in its highest form. Trump wants money to come to the United States for investment and purchase of U.S. production. Tariffs on imports of money make no sense.

If, as seems likely, the U.S. government has gold loan and swap obligations to meet,  it would have another reason not to impede imports of monetary metal.

The second problem with the tariff scare scenario is that U.S. bullion banks and traders lately have had no trouble using New York Commodities Exchange futures contracts to obtain gold in London via the “exchange for physical” and “exchange for risk” mechanisms of fulfilling futures obligations. The bullion banks do gold business in both cities and gold can be sold for cash in London and the cash wired back to the United States.

Third, the reports say the Bank of England has been desperately lending metal from its vaults — presumably its own metal and the metal of other central banks — to help the bullion banks get metal for shipping to New York. But typically gold lending is a paper transaction in which IOUs, not actual metal, change hands. The IOUs are treated as the real thing but ordinarily, the underlying metal never leaves the vault. For several years gold’s big trend in central banking has been the repatriation of metal out of London and New York as nations don’t want to risk having their foreign-exchange assets frozen or confiscated by the United States or its allies. What central banks vaulting gold at the Bank of England these days would be giving permission for their metal to be moved even more distant from their control?

These considerations suggest another explanation for the gold shortage in London.

That is, what if the tariff panic stories are just more disinformation?

After all, both the Financial Times and Reuters reports were based on anonymous sources, precluding any accountability.

What if there really is just an ordinary shortage of gold? Or, to be more precise, what if there is a shortage of gold under U.S. and U.K. control relative to rising international demand for the safe-haven metal?

News reports and research by Jan Nieuwenhuijs of Money Metals Exchange and others — even the feckless World Gold Council — long have been telling of rising demand for metal, particularly in Asia. Russia, China, and the BRICS countries have been openly contemplating building gold into a new international trade currency system to escape from the seemingly infinite financial derivatives with which the United States has been rigging markets and creating infinite imaginary supplies of gold and silver. These countries may not be seeking to destroy the U.S. dollar but they are looking for a hedge against it.

If the fraudulent, derivatives-based Western gold market was breaking down at last, would it look much different than the situation reported in London recently?

And if gold were to be revalued by agreement among the major central banks — including the big recent acquirers of the metal — mightn’t revaluation be precipitated by a shortage of the metal in a major market?

Your secretary/treasurer long has thought that a revaluation would have to be accomplished in a flash — that is, on a Sunday night before the Asian markets opened — and that all major central banks would have to be participating in it. Nieuwenhuijs has produced evidence of official preparations for revaluation.

The record of central bank involvement in gold since the United States repudiated the Bretton Woods gold exchange standard in 1971 shows central banks striving to prevent the gold market from getting ahead of them — that is, to prevent a genuinely free market in the monetary metal from developing at all:

https://www.gata.org/node/20925

But lately gold does seem to have been getting ahead of them, rising about 35% in dollar terms over the past year, and more in other currencies.

Meanwhile, government and private debt has exploded in the United States, China, and other nations. China already may be in a depression.

Devaluing currencies is what governments do to inflate debt.

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