
Gold ingots, like these from the Bank of Sweden, form the base of many monetary systems
'Gold reserves' (or 'gold holdings') are held by
central banks as a
store of value. At the end of 2004 central banks and official organizations held 19% of all above ground
gold as a
reserve asset.
[1] In 2001, it was estimated that all the gold ever mined totalled 145,000 tonnes.
[2] As one
metric tonne equals 1,000 kilograms (or 32,150
troy ounces), this equated to a value of
US$3 trillion in April 2006.
[3] For comparison, the entire global
market capitalization for all
stock markets was US$43.6 trillion in March 2006. About one percent of all above ground gold (370 metric tonnes) was mined in the first five years of the
California Gold Rush (worth approximately US$7.2 billion at November 2006 prices).
[Mining History and Geology of the Mother Lode (accessed Oct. 16, 2006).]
IMF gold reserves
IMF gold reserves refers to 3,217 tonnes of gold held by the
International Monetary Fund. It is currently priced at a range of $40 and $50 a troy ounce ($1,300 to $1,600/kg), a price that was fixed in the 1970s before the
Nixon government stopped pegging the
U.S. dollar to the gold and instead allowed market forces to set the dollar's worth. An attempt to revalue the gold reserve to today's value has met resistance for different reasons. For example,
Canada, the world's #1 gold producer, is against the idea of revaluing the reserve, as it would flood the market with gold and therefore depress its price.
[4] It is also not clear whether the gold reserve is the property of the IMF or of member countries.
Three quarters of the gold reserve was contributed by G5 members, namely
France,
Germany,
Japan,
United States and
United Kingdom. The gold piles contributed by the French, the Germans, the Japanese, the Americans and the British are each worth $10 bn.
Privately held gold
As of January 2007,
gold exchange-traded funds held 629 tonnes of gold in total for private and institutional investors. In 2004, it was estimated that the
Indian public held 13,000 tonnes of gold in jewelry or other forms.
[5]
Officially reported gold reserves
As of 22 September 2005, the largest gold holdings in
tonnes as reported by the
World Gold Council can be seen in the table below.
[6] The United States' holding of gold is worth approximately
US$164 billion (December 2006).
See also
★
Foreign exchange reserves
★
Sovereign wealth funds
★
United States Bullion Depository
★
Federal Reserve Bank of New York
★
Gold as an investment
★
Strategic Petroleum Reserve
★ The "
Moscow Gold", the reserves of the
Bank of Spain sent to the Soviet Union for storage by the
Second Spanish Republic during the
Spanish Civil War never to return.
References
1. ''Central Banks and Official Institutions'' World Gold Council
2. gold knowledge / frequently asked questions World Gold Coulncil
3. Current gold market statistics London Bullion Market Organization
4. ''Gold falls on IMF sale concerns''
5. ''Bullion Markets''
6. http://www.gold.org/value/stats/statistics/gold_reserve/index.html]