A major conference on the
future of banking yesterday heard contributions on a European banking
union which is being negotiated by Eurozone finance ministers. One of
the aspects of that union will be a ‘bail-in’ of deposits when banks
fail in the future. Michael Noonan, Ireland’s Minister for Finance confirmed yesterday that bail-ins or deposit confiscation will be used.
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From Goldcore:
Today’s AM fix was USD 1,219.00, EUR 898.50 and GBP 743.07 per ounce.
Yesterday’s AM fix was USD 1,237.50, EUR 913.08 and GBP 754.30 per ounce.
Gold fell $32.20 or 2.57% yesterday, closing at $1,219.00/oz. Silver
slid $0.84 or 4.2% closing at $19.15/oz. Platinum dropped $20.95, or
1.5%, to $1,336.25 /oz and palladium fell $9.78, or 1.4%, to $708.72/oz.
Gold advanced from nearly a five-month low, after the biggest one-day
drop since October, as investors assessed whether the U.S. economy is
strong enough to warrant a move away from ultra loose monetary policies.
Gold fell despite the data yesterday being mixed. It showed that
while U.S. manufacturing unexpectedly accelerated in November at the
fastest pace in more than two years, retail spending fell on the weekend
after Thanksgiving for the first time since 2009. The overly indebted
U.S. consumer is struggling which does not bode well for the consumer
dependent U.S. economy.
Gold in US Dollars, 5 Year (Bloomberg)
Bulls took solace in the fact that the price falls came on very low
volumes – volume was 20% below the average for the past 100 days at this
time of day, data compiled by Bloomberg showed.
Gold is down 26% year to date and many analysts agree that it is now
very oversold. The 14-day relative-strength index fell to 30 yesterday,
signaling to some analysts who study charts that the price may be set
to rebound.
Physical demand picked up on lower prices overnight – particularly in
China and Asia. In China, now the largest buyer of gold in the world,
premiums of 99.99% purity gold climbed to about $11 an ounce from $7 on
Monday on the Shanghai Gold Exchange (SGE).
Bail-Ins And Deposit Confiscation Coming Noonan Confirms At ‘Future of Banking in Europe’ Conference
A major conference on the future of banking yesterday heard
contributions on a European banking union which is being negotiated by
Eurozone finance ministers. One of the aspects of that union will be a
‘bail-in’ of deposits when banks fail in the future. Michael Noonan,
Ireland’s Minister for Finance confirmed yesterday that bail-ins or
deposit confiscation will be used.
The toolkit underpinning the Single Resolution Mechanism is provided
for in the bank recovery and resolution proposal (BRR) which was agreed
last June in Council under the Irish Presidency. The proposal provides a
common framework of rules and powers to help EU countries manage
arrangements to deal with failing banks at national level as well as
cross-border banks, whilst preserving essential bank operations and
minimising taxpayers’ exposure to losses.
One of the main pillars to the BRR framework to facilitate a range of
actions by authorities are “resolution tools”. Noonan confirmed
yesterday that resolution tools include the sale of business, bridge
bank and asset separation tools and also the use of bailins.
The era of bondholder bailouts is ending and that of depositor bail-ins is coming.
Preparations have been or are being put in place by the international monetary and financial authorities for bail-ins. The majority of the public are unaware of these developments, the risks and the ramifications.
It is now the case that in the event of bank failure, your deposits could be confiscated.
Let’s be crystal clear: The EU, UK, the U.S., Canada, Australia and
New Zealand all have plans for bail-ins in the event of banks and other
large financial institutions getting into difficulty.
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