If you thought the West was unprepared for inflation – or indeed for Russia – wait and see just how unprepared it is for this bombshell.
This is the biggest story in world finance, and yet nobody, bar your intrepid blogger, is reporting on it.
For those without the attention spans to read all the way to the end, let’s cut to the chase and get the main point out upfront: China has more gold than the United States.
We’ve seen many examples over the last few decades of how the United States weaponizes the dollar, exploiting its status as global reserve currency.
The sanctions on Russia and its removal from the Swift messaging system this week are perhaps the most dramatic example of all. Russian civilians have had their wealth decimated (in fact, probably significantly more than decimated for most) almost overnight.
China will be surely watching all of this, learning from Russia’s mistakes and thinking it needs to de-dollarise as swiftly and discreetly as possible. Whether to protect its citizens’ wealth or its national interests, China cannot be beholden to a banking system that is run by the West – the US especially – and which is one of their weapons of war.
Both Russia and China have known they must de-dollarise for some considerable time, which is why both have been so steadily increasing their gold holdings.
Let’s start with Russia’s gold. The chart is courtesy of Nick Laird of goldchartsrus.com and it shows the Russian Central Bank’s accumulation to today’s figure of, give or take, 2,300 tonnes – roughly 74 million ounces (there are 32,150 troy ounces in a tonne).
That makes Russia, according to official figures at least, the fifth-largest gold owner in the world.
The table below, courtesy of the World Gold Council, shows the top 19 owners of gold, also their foreign exchange reserves and their percentage allocation to gold. The US has the most – 8,134 tonnes – followed by Germany, Italy, France and Russia.
The UK sits proudly in 17th position. Behind Kazakhstan, Turkey and Uzbekistan. Thank you Gordon Brown.
Row 0 – Cell 0 | Country | FX reserves $m | Total reserves $m | Gold holdings % | Gold reserves Oz (m) | Gold reserves (tonnes) |
1 | USA | 239,485 | 695,225 | 65.55 | 455,741 | 8,133.5 |
2 | Germany | 99,513 | 287,732 | 65.41 | 188,219 | 3,359.1 |
3 | Italy | 83,583 | 220,966 | 62.17 | 137,383 | 2,451.8 |
4 | France | 102,439 | 238,954 | 57.13 | 136,515 | 2,436.4 |
5 | Russian | 485,462 | 614,255 | 20.97 | 128,793 | 2,298.5 |
6 | China | 3,264,064 | 3,373,233 | 3.24 | 109,169 | 1,948.3 |
7 | Switzerland | 1,019,165 | 1,077,439 | 5.41 | 58,274 | 1,040.0 |
8 | Japan | 1,358,141 | 1,405,543 | 3.37 | 47,402 | 845.9 |
9 | India | 598,057 | 639,736 | 6.52 | 41,679 | 743.8 |
10 | Netherlands | 28,229 | 62,547 | 54.87 | 34,318 | 612.4 |
11 | Taiwan | 544,899 | 568,636 | 4.17 | 23,7367 | 423.6 |
12 | Kazakhstan | 13,407 | 35,664 | 62.41 | 22,257 | 397.2 |
13 | Turkey | 81,176 | 103,186 | 21.33 | 22,010 | 392.8 |
14 | Uzbekistan | 13,070 | 34,558 | 62.18 | 21,489 | 383.5 |
15 | Portugal | 11,606 | 33,042 | 64.88 | 21,436 | 382.6 |
16 | Saudi Arabia | 465,059 | 483,161 | 3.75 | 18,102 | 323.07 |
17 | UK | 175,879 | 193,265 | 9 | 17,386 | 310.3 |
18 | Lebanon | 19,430 | 35,501 | 45.27 | 16,072 | 286.8 |
19 | Spain | 75,479 | 91,256 | 17.29 | 15,778 | 281.6 |
The country we are focusing on today is the one in sixth place on that table, China.
First, consider China’s US dollar holdings – over three trillion of them. That’s more than the UK’s annual GDP. Its US dollar holdings eclipse those of every other nation; China is not going to want those to go to zero – not yet, anyway.
Then consider its gold holdings. It has 1,948 tonnes, barely 3% of its foreign exchange reserves. The US’s gold holdings equate to over 65% of its reserves.
What if China were to approach that level?
Well, my argument is that China has much more gold than it says it does.
There are two parts to this argument. First, China’s gold mining. In 2007, China overtook South Africa as the world’s largest gold producer. It has remained so ever since. This past decade it has produced about 15% of all the gold mined in the world.
Since 2000, China has mined roughly 6,830 tonnes. Over half of Chinese gold production is state-owned – the China National Gold Group Corporation alone accounts for 20%. And China keeps the gold it mines – the export of domestic mine production is not allowed.
I say that number again: 6,830 tonnes. Already that official 1,948 figure looks very dubious.
With reserves in decline at home, Chinese mining companies have also been buying assets abroad, across Africa, South America and Asia. International production exceeds domestic production – by about 15 tonnes in 2020.
Second, there is the fact that, as well as being the biggest producer, China is the world’s biggest importer. Gold imports via Switzerland and Dubai are not always declared, but we do know that via Hong Kong alone, over 6,700 tonnes have entered the country since 2000.
Add that to cumulative gold production since 2000, and you get a figure over 13,500 tonnes.
Whether imported, mined or recycled, most of the gold that enters China goes through the Shanghai Gold Exchange (SGE), including the gold imported from Hong Kong. So SGE withdrawals – for which we do have numbers – can act as something of an approximation for demand. And it is possible to get numbers for SGE withdrawals: since 2008, almost 22,000 tonnes have been withdrawn from the SGE.
Then we have to add gold held in China, whether as bullion or jewellery, before 2000. The World Gold Council estimates a figure of 2,500 tonnes in privately-held jewellery. Added to domestic mining and official reserves, you get a figure of around 4,000 tonnes.
Cobble it all together – cumulative production, imports and existing stock – and you arrive at a figure not far off 31,000 tonnes.
I’ve spoken to some of the world’s top analysts – Ross Norman, Bron Suchecki and Koos Jansen – and they all arrive at similar estimates. Alasdair McLeod of Goldmoney thinks it is higher still.
But there is more, as Ross Norman points out.
Not all gold entering China is accounted for by SGE withdrawals. The People’s Bank of China (PBOC), the central bank, likes to buy 12.5kg bars, which do not trade on the SGE. The PBOC often uses dollars on exchanges in London, Dubai and Switzerland, while the SGE sells its gold in yuan.
The Chinese army, too, owns gold and does not have to declare its purchases. And there are other state agencies, as well: the State Administration of Foreign Exchange and China Investment Corporation – the sovereign wealth fund, for example.
How much of this gold is state owned? Norman guesses 50%; Suchecki, formerly of the Perth Mint, says 55%.
At 50%, the implication is that China owns over 15,000 tonnes – closing in on double the US.
“Chinese Central Bank gold holdings have apparently been entirely unchanged since mid-2019 at 1,948 tonnes,” Ross Norman tells me. “But few of us believe that. Put an additional zero on the end (19,480 tonnes) and I should not be surprised if that is not much closer to their official holdings”.
Alasdair McLeod goes one stage further. “The PRC probably has as much as 30,000 tonnes hidden in various accounts, but not declared as official reserves”.
Whether ten, 15 or 30,000 tonnes, there is no way China can declare such large holdings. Not yet anyway – it would cause an unwanted surge in both the yuan and the gold price. The government’s $3.2trn of US dollar foreign exchange reserves would be devalued.
“I don’t think China needs to brag about its largesse,” says Norman. “After all, a stronger currency as a result of that reserve backing would be counter-productive, as it would confer competitive disadvantage”.
What’s more, to declare so much gold would be a direct challenge to American supremacy, which China is probably not yet ready for. Parity first, then supremacy.
For now they follow Deng Xiaoping’s doctrine of “we must not shine too brightly.” Its declared 1,948 tonnes is, perhaps, the bare minimum it could declare and look credible. But a mere 3% of China’s forex reserves in gold? Pull the other one.
If China decides to weaponise money, as the US has done, all it has to do is declare its gold holdings, perhaps even partially back the yuan with them. Talk was, at one stage, its central bank digital currency (CBDC) would be partially gold backed.
Unbacked Western money risks losing a great deal of its purchasing power in such an event. To back Western fiat even partially with gold would mean a dramatic upwards revaluation of gold – into the tens of thousands.
But that is the card China now has with its 20 years of relentless accumulation. He who owns the gold, makes the rules.
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