by GoldCore
Today’s AM fix was USD 1,436.50, EUR 1,103.47 and GBP 938.15 per ounce.
Yesterday’s AM fix was USD 1,429.75, EUR 1,102.52 and GBP 931.19 per ounce.
Cross Currency Table – (Bloomberg)
Gold fell $11.90 or -0.82% yesterday to $1,431.40/oz and silver finished -0.8%.
The European Union will today meet to discuss and move forward the
proposal to ‘bail-in’ depositors with savings of over €100,000 as part
of future bank wind-downs. It now looks likely that the EU is going to
take unprecedented steps to sequester monies from its citizens in the
event of future bank failures.
Only three months ago a €10 billion bailout was announced by the
European Commission (EC), European Central Bank (ECB) and International
Monetary Fund (IMF) in return for Cyprus agreeing to close its second
largest bank, the Cyprus Popular Bank and in the process levying all
uninsured deposits and up to 40% of uninsured deposits in the Bank of
Cyprus. All insured deposits of €100,000 or less were not included as
part of what we now know to be a ‘bail in.’
As it is the Irish that currently hold the EU presidency, this key
legislation is being proposed and presented by Ireland’s finance
minister, Michael Noonan. Walking a tightrope, Noonan and his team have
to negotiate the significant differences that exist between member
states. Some states have not ruled out the possibility that insured
deposits would also be included in the ‘bail-in,’ a proposition rendered
senseless considering that all deposits under €100,000 are insured.
A key development prior to today’s EU finance ministers meeting is
that uninsured deposits of over €100,000 would be ‘bailed in’ in a bank
that is resolved – the successful restructuring of an institution which
ensures the continuity of its essential functions, preserves financial
stability and restores the viability of all or part of that institution.
Where the resolution is unsuccessful and the bank is wound down, then
it is proposed that depositors would rank higher than other creditors.
Gold in Euros, Year to Date – (Bloomberg)
Nothing is guaranteed. Only on 4th April, Mario Draghi, President of
the ECB, in an ECB press conference, when asked about the Cypriot
bail-in as a template for future cases replied, “let me stress that
Cyprus is not a template! I have not had chance to talk to the President
of the Eurogroup, but I am absolutely sure that he has been
misunderstood. After all, the bail-out of the Dutch bank SNS REAAL,
which involved the bail-in of only shareholders and junior debtors to
the tune of €4 billion, had been agreed only a few days earlier. And
that is no template either.”
Gold in U.S. Dollars, Year to Date – (Bloomberg)
One thing appears to be guaranteed. Large savers appear to be deemed
fair game when it comes to mitigating for the losses in the event of a
bank failure(s.) This will prove to be decisive and while the European
Commission meets to discuss and review the new banking legislation;
Europeans with deposits of over €100,000 will consider their
alternatives.
GoldCore has long advocated that depositors hold a portion of their
assets in precious metals. Our investment rationale for holding gold is
as a portfolio diversifier, a hedge against inflation, a safe haven
asset, and a hedge against currency risk. We can now add deposit
confiscation to that list.
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