Financial authorities should responsibly sell their gold stocks
The Global Public Investor 2025 survey carried out by the think tank Official Monetary and Financial Institutions Forum (OMFIF) has found that gold is currently the asset class most demanded by central banks, with a third of the surveyed reserve managers expecting to increase their holdings in the short term.
The World Gold Council's survey of central banks has found that 95 per cent of the survey respondents believe central bank gold reserves will rise in the next 12 months.
But are financial authorities using their balance sheets wisely, and could the rush to gold diversification potentially be built on a house of sand?
Financial authorities face enormous fiscal headaches. They sit on massive gold stocks dwarfing annual gold demand. The four largest official gold holders alone – the US, Germany, Italy and France – together hold 16,000 metric tonnes of gold. Demand for the metal in 2024 was roughly 5,000 tonnes, of which central bank demand represented more than 20 per cent, said the World Gold Council.
In short, gold prices receive massive support simply because vast official stocks are held off the market. Were these official gold stocks responsibly sold, any upside for gold prices would most likely be capped, and prices might well fall. That would surely take the shine off it.
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Gold sales could reduce fiscal debt and financing pressures
These data points beg the question of why nations continue to hold their gold stocks. It no longer has an official role in the international monetary system, generates no interest, is costly to store, is less liquid and harder to sell than securities, for example. Even if one argues that holding gold stocks results in an appreciation for the national balance sheet, that is generating no flow of resources to officialdom.
Meanwhile, monetising gold stocks could generate resources for good use. For example, US debt held by the public is now roughly US$30 trillion. US gold sales over time, using current market prices for illustrative purposes, could generate over US$850 billion for the US Treasury. That amount is admittedly a fraction of the debt held by the public. Nonetheless, reducing debt by such an amount could lessen pressures on interest rates, especially at a time of unsustainable fiscal deficits.
Similar arguments could be made for France and Italy: If the proceeds of their central banks' gold sales could legally be used to reduce their governments' fiscal debt, indebtedness would fall by more than 5 per cent. European gold sales might back efforts to reach the new 5 per cent of gross domestic product spending target agreed by North Atlantic Treaty Organization members.
Again, gold stocks would need to be sold responsibly by official authorities. An uncoordinated rush to sell gold would send prices spiralling downwards. In 1999, after such a period reportedly led by the UK and Switzerland, European central banks signed the Washington Agreement on Gold, setting annual limits on official gold sales so as not to disrupt markets. When the International Monetary Fund sold limited quantities of gold after the 2008 financial crisis, efforts were made to contain market disruption. Such constraints provide important precedents for official gold sales.
Clash with realpolitik
Notwithstanding a cogent rationale for official gold sales, they are unlikely to occur because of a clash with realpolitik. There are many 'gold bugs' who atavistically believe gold could anchor a futuristic monetary order, or that a commodity-based international monetary system could better discipline inflation.
Gold-producing firms would lobby strenuously against any significant official gold sales, as they did when former UK prime minister Gordon Brown some 20 years ago proposed using International Monetary Fund (IMF) gold sales to finance the IMF's part of the Multilateral Debt Relief Initiative.
Some gold-producing developing countries might object. Plus, Trump can be expected to continue his erratic fiscal, trade and geopolitical policies.
Nations facing massive debts or financing needs would be well advised to consider responsibly selling their gold holdings, which inefficiently encumber their national balance sheets. Gold prices may be surging now on central bank diversification, for example by China and India, but that is primarily because massive official stocks are being held off the market.
If authorities were to responsibly sell gold stocks, it might quickly become evident that frothy headlines about gold and official reserve diversification were built on sand.
The writer is US chair of the Official Monetary and Financial Institutions Forum.
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