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-Caveat Lector-

Gold's Midas touch leaves banks cold 

By Adrienne Roberts 
Financial Times 
Sunday, November 17, 2002

http://news.ft.com/servlet/ContentServer?
pagename=FT.com/StoryFT/FullStory&c=StoryFT&cid=1035873370123&p=101257
1727207 

Against a backdrop of corporate scandals and 
plunging stock markets, the price of gold has 
climbed by about 20 per cent in the past 18 
months. Mining companies' profit margins have 
grown and anyone with a nest egg of bullion 
bars is feeling a little safer. 

Not everyone in the market is smiling, 
however. Business has never been tougher for 
the bullion banks and, while investors have a 
new-found enthusiasm for gold, the serious 
money has bypassed the metal itself, pouring 
instead into mining shares. 

Meanwhile, the bullion banks, which do 
business with the mining groups and central 
banks, have seen their profits dwindle. That 
is largely because of the fall in hedging 
business. When the outlook for gold prices is 
uncertain, mining companies might choose to 
manage the risk by locking in a future price 
for their gold. Bullion banks help make these 
forward sales possible, providing derivative 
products such as forwards and options. 

Hedging was good business for the banks 
during the 1990s as they designed 
increasingly sophisticated derivative 
structures for clients. But producers became 
more cautious after 1999 when the gold price 
spiked unexpectedly and�Ashanti Goldfields of 
Ghana and�Cambior of Canada's derivative 
positions brought them close to disaster. 

"By 2000 the producers were looking at much 
more 'plain vanilla'-type business: basic 
forwards, basic options," says one mining 
executive. "The really lucrative trades 
started drying up though there was continued 
volume in the bread and butter stuff." 

But as gold has pulled out of its decade-long 
slump, producers have stopped hedging. Some 
are letting contracts expire, others are 
buying themselves out of their positions. 

Conventional wisdom says this development, 
and gold's rally, were begun the US Federal 
Reserve. Falling dollar interest rates made 
it unprofitable for miners to hedge, or for 
speculators to sell the metal short. 

For forward sales to make commercial sense, 
the cost of borrowing gold must be less than 
the cost of borrowing money. In the mid 1990s 
one could have borrowed gold at 1 per cent, 
sold it and invested the proceeds at 7 per 
cent. But falling US interest rates have 
narrowed that gap. 

Not only is hedging no longer profitable, it 
has become anathema to investors seeking 
exposure to gold's rally. 

Investor sentiment has rewarded the unhedged 
miners, putting pressure on the non-hedgers 
to increase their price exposure. Shares in 
the unhedged South African producer�Gold 
Fields have risen about 160 per cent in US 
dollar terms over the past year, compared 
with about 70 per cent for rival�Anglogold, 
which does hedge (although Anglogold and 
other hedgers have significantly reduced 
their books). 

While producers continue reducing their hedge 
books, they continue to support bullion 
prices. Ironically, the suppliers themselves 
have become a key source of demand for the 
metal. 

"In 1999, producers were adding around 500 
tonnes of gold a year to supply through 
hedging. They are now taking back around 500 
tonnes through de-hedging," says Andy Smith, 
analyst at Mitsui in London. 

But once the producers have finished buying, 
will there be enough other demand to keep 
gold buoyant? Investment demand for bullion 
has risen - by 12 per cent in the first half 
of 2002 compared with that period in 2001, 
according to the World Gold Council. But 
recent data show that producer buybacks were 
mirrored by a fall in demand from jewellery 
makers as prices climbed. 

"If you take a very bearish view, once the 
crust of producer buying is finished then 
prices may slide alarmingly," says a banker. 
With US interest rates still low and the 
dollar floundering, however, it might be 
premature to call the end of gold's run just 
yet. 

-END-



 

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DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance�not soap-boxing�please!  These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'�with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds�is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
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