Gold repatriation refers to plans of various governments to bring home their gold stored outside the home country.
Many countries use foreign vaults for safe-keeping of part of their gold reserves and there is a growing tendency not to trust the foreign custodian.
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Background
In past, nations from across the globe have stored their gold at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York (FRBNY) for numerous reasons;
- During World War II Germany confiscated as much gold as they could from nations they occupied, other vulnerable nations anticipated by shipping their gold to the US;
- After World War II there was the threat of the USSR to seize sovereign gold reserves as spoils of any Cold War action;
- Under the Bretton Woods System (1944 -1971) it was agreed the US dollar was the world reserve currency, backed by gold. It was thus convenient to store gold in New York for trade settlements; additionally, dollars that were converted into gold were credited to FRBNY foreign gold accounts;
- After the Bretton Woods system, when gold was officially removed from the monetary system, gold was often sold or leased by central banks, facilitated by their accounts at FRBNY.
In the aftermath of the financial meltdown in 2008 European central banks stopped selling gold, Asian and South-American central banks increased official purchases, and central banks from all continents began to worry if storing gold abroad was wise when the next global financial crisis evolved.
There are rumors that US has sold a portion of this gold to underpin the US dollar hegemony in recent decades. Edmund Moy, former Director of the United States Mint (Fort Knox), quoted on June 13, 2014: "Finally, more countries are repatriating their gold. For them, an audit is not enough. They would like their gold back. Azerbaijan, Ecuador, Iran, Libya, Mexico, Romania, and Venezuela is a short list of countries that have requests into their custodians to transfer some or all their gold back to their countries."
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Venezuela
Venezuela, which has the 15th largest holdings in the world according to the World Gold Council, held 211 tons of its 365 tons of gold reserves in U.S., European, and Canadian banks as of August, 2011. President Hugo Chávez in August 2011 ordered the central bank to repatriate the country's gold reserves as a safeguard against instability in financial markets.
By January 30, 2012, within two months, Venezuela had brought 160 tons of gold valued at around $9 billion back to Caracas, Venezuela.
The President of Venezuela's central bank, Nelson Merentes said Venezuela will leave about fifteen percent of its reserves, or around fifty tons, outside of Venezuela for financial transactions. On January 3, 2012 this quantity was modified to fifteen tons.
A central bank report released in August showed that Venezuela held gold reserves with the Bank of England, JPMorgan Chase, Barclays, and Standard Chartered among other banks.
"This was the largest type of operation to transport this type of metal in the last 15 years," Merentes said. "The repatriation of our gold was an act of financial prudence and sovereignty."
The Netherlands
In November 2014, The Netherlands repatriated 122.5 tonnes (almost 4 million ounces) with a market value of US$5B of Dutch gold from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York (FRBNY) back to the Dutch central bank (DNB) in Amsterdam. This will reduce the exposure of the Dutch Central Bank to the US financial system to just 31% of its gold, stored in the vault of the Fed, down from 51%. Compared to Germany, which widely publicised its attempt to repatriate the gold, the Netherlands used a different approach, repatriating it before announcing the fact. While repatriating a large part of the gold which was stored in New York, the Netherlands did not touch their gold stored in Canada and London.
Klaas Knot, Governor of the Dutch Central Bank, confirmed in an interview (March 2014) that in 2012 the Netherlands had made concrete emergency plans for the event that the euro crashed. Not long after, the repatriation of gold began.
Germany
In January 2013, the German central bank (Deutsche Bundesbank) announced plans to repatriate 300 tonnes of its 1,500 tons of gold from the US and 374 tonnes from France by 2020, in order to have half (1,695.3 tonnes) of its official gold reserves stored in Frankfurt. The gold in the U.S. was earned by West Germany through trade surpluses in the 1950s and 1960s and was never moved out of the United States due to fear of invasion by the Soviet Union. In 2013, a mere 5 tonnes were shipped due to logistical difficulties. However, Germany repatriated 120 t in 2014 (35 tonnes from Paris, 85 t from New York), 210 t in 2015 (110.5 t from Paris and 99.5 t from New York) and 200 t in 2016.
France
Marine Le Pen, leader of the Front National party of France, penned an open letter on Nov 26, 2014 to Christian Noyer, governor of the Bank of France, requesting that the country's gold holdings be repatriated.
Belgium
In an interview with Belgium broadcaster VTM Nieuws Sunday, Luc Coene, governor of Belgium's central bank, confirmed that the bank is looking at how they can bring their gold reserves back into the country.
According to IMF data compiled by the World Gold Council, Belgium holds 227.4 metric tons of gold, representing 34.2% of its official foreign reserves. According to reports, most of the gold is held outside of the country with the Bank of England, the Bank of Canada and the Bank for International Settlements.
Switzerland
Save our Swiss Gold motion was a citizen movement that called for the central bank to hold at least 20 percent of its assets in gold, prohibit selling any gold in future and bring all its reserve of gold back in the country. This referendum was held on November 30, 2014, but was lost.
Austria
Austria currently holds 80% of their 280 tons of gold in London, 17% in Austria, and 3% in Switzerland. Citing a need for risk diversification, Austria announced they will be repatriating gold from London during 2015. After the repatriation process has completed, 50% of Austria's gold will be held in Austria, 20% in Switzerland, and the remaining 30% in London.
India
India's central bank bought 200 metric tons of gold from the International Monetary Fund in 2009, in the first major move by a major central bank to diversify its foreign-exchange reserves.
Mexico
In 2011, Mexico quietly purchased nearly 100 tons of gold bullion, as central banks embarked on their biggest bullion buying spree in 40 years. China, Russia, and India had acquired large amounts of gold in recent years, while Thailand, Sri Lanka and Bolivia had made smaller purchases.
Bangladesh
On September 9, 2010, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) announced the sale of 10 metric tons of gold to the Bangladesh Bank, the central bank of Bangladesh.
Source of the article : Wikipedia
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