Get Futures Price   
IMF gold sale unlikely to affect prices : Analysts
Published on: September 23, 2009 at 15:45
LONDON (Commodity Online) : Four days after the IMF took the decision to unload more than 400 tones of gold, analysts said it is unlikely to have a major impact on the market at a time when prices of the metal are at a near-record high.

Morgan Stanley analysts said they did not see the IMF gold sales ‘as a material threat’ to current prices or their forecast of 1,000 dollars per ounce for 2010.

Trading platform that even a 5 year old can trade. Join now

The fund’s assurance on sales ‘keeps the hope that the IMF’s gold will be sold directly to other central banks or sovereign holders alive,’ said analysts at UBS based in London.

Analysts at Barclays Capital said the market has been widely expecting the confirmation of the IMF gold sales that were first proposed in January 2007.

The IMF move ‘is short-term negative, they said forecasting a five to 10 per cent retracement in prices.

The analysts noted IMF’s intention to maintain orderly gold sales and market stability, citing safeguards such as selling off-market to central banks or other official sectors, selling slowly, potentially over several years, and capping any on-market sales to levels within the new Central Bank Gold Agreement.

Under the pact, European central banks agreed to limit their gold sales to 400 tonnes a year.

The International Monetary Fund announced Friday that its executive board had endorsed the sale of 403.3 tonnes of gold, worth about 13 billion dollars at current prices, to boost its lending capacity to poor countries.

Gold prices jumped last week to within grasp of record highs above 1,000 dollars per ounce on the back of a weak dollar and mounting economic optimism.

The IMF announced the gold sale soon after the market closed on Friday, saying sales would be conducted under ‘modalities that safeguard against disruption of the gold market.’

The 186-nation institution said the decision was a core element of a new income model to make it less dependent on its lending revenue to cover expenses, such as surveillance of members’ economic and financial policies that the board had approved in April 2008.

The Group of 20 key developed and developing countries, at their April summit in London, agreed the gold sales should allow the IMF to offer favorable conditions on loans to the poorest countries.

The IMF decision came ahead of a two-day G20 summit in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, that opens Thursday.
Bookmark
 
 
Total Comments :   0 
Join the discussion
Name *
Your Email
Comments:
characters left
Enter the text as it is shown in the box below
In India, gold is considered as one of the prestigious instruments of investment among the household consumers. Small household units are now becoming potential investors for gold from the key consumers. The demand for consumption purpose is no longer the main driver of demand for the yellow metal, but the systematic investments in retail gold investment options is the latest crush among the small investors in the country.
Explore Commodity
Online
Read
Check Out
In Depth
Channels
Research
SMS Services
Others
About Us   |    Advertise   |    Contact Us   |    Feedback   |    Disclaimer   |    Terms & Conditions   |    Sitemap