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Demand for gold predicted to rise in global transition to multi-currency
reserve system
11 Jan, 2013

*Beijing, 11 January 2013* – Demand for gold is likely to rise as the world
heads towards a multi-currency reserve system under the impact of
uncertainty about the stability of the dollar and the euro, the main
official assets held by central banks and sovereign funds. This is the
conclusion of a wide-ranging analysis of the world monetary system by
Official Monetary and Financial Institutions Forum, (OMFIF), in a report
commissioned by the World Gold Council, the gold industry’s market
development body.

Driven by China’s desire to increase its financial influence, the Chinese
renminbi is likely to emerge gradually as a genuine international currency
as Beijing eases restrictions on its use in transactions and investments
abroad. During the coming period of uncertainty and transition between
different reserve currencies, official central bank asset managers around
the world are likely to increase their interest in gold as a result of
doubts about the overall strength of global monetary arrangements.

The OMFIF report explores the asset management consequences of greater
dispersion of global economic power. It states: ‘The world is headed
towards the uncharted waters of a durable multi-currency reserve system,
where the dollar will share its pivotal role with a range of other
currencies, including the renminbi.’

OMFIF believes the re-balancing of the world economy through China’s
economic rise will occur gradually rather than abruptly and will not be
straightforward. In particular, the move towards full renminbi
convertibility is likely to be only gradual. Although the renminbi’s rise
as a reserve currency is unlikely to pose any immediate threat to the
dollar, ‘during this period of change and transition reserve holders will
spread their investments into a relatively wide range of assets and
sectors.’

While OMFIF does not envisage a return to a gold standard, the report says,
‘Gold will increasingly have a renewed role in the global monetary system,
attracting a higher level of attention from policy-makers and financial
market practitioners.’

According to Natalie Dempster, World Gold Council Director of Government
Affairs:
‘The report makes a substantial contribution to the debate around the
global transition to a multi-currency reserve system, with important
implications for reserve asset managers. We are already seeing many of the
world’s central banks increase the allocation of their reserves to gold and
this report points to an acceleration of that trend.’

The OMFIF report includes a foreword by Prof. Lord (Meghnad) Desai,
chairman of the OMFIF Advisory Board. He states: ‘As China weighs up its
options for joining in the reserve asset game, gold – the official asset
that plays no formal part in the monetary system, yet has never really gone
away – is poised, yet again, to play a pivotal role.’

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