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Daily Dispatches

Bullion groups launch gold bar database to thwart fraud

Section: Daily Dispatches

By Peter Hobson
Reuters
Monday, March 28, 2022

LONDON -- Two gold industry associations are working with miners, refiners, traders, and shippers to create a database of gold bars in an effort to prevent trade in counterfeit metal and allow buyers of bullion to trace its origin, they said today.

The scheme aims to exclude gold linked to violence and crime from the mainstream market. Gold worth billions of dollars is mined each year in illegal conditions and large amounts are sold by groups including warlords and drug traffickers.

Resuming gold purchases, Russia sets fixed price below world market

Section: Daily Dispatches

By Anna Golubova
Kitco News, Montreal
Monday, March 28, 2022

Russia's central bank resumed its gold purchases from local banks today, but it set a fixed price on the precious metal.

Starting this week the Russian central bank will pay a fixed price of 5,000 roubles ($52) per gram between March 28 and June 30, the bank said on Friday. This is below the current market value of around $68.

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Russia's 'nuclear option' isn't bombs but gold, London trader Maguire says

Section: Daily Dispatches

11:55a ET Saturday, March 26, 2022

Dear Friend of GATA and Gold:

Russia, London metals trader Andrew Maguire says in his weekly interview with Shane Morand for Kinesis Money, is moving steadily toward using its "nuclear option" in its conflict with the West over Ukraine. That option, Maguire says, doesn't involve bombs but rather demanding gold as payment for Russia's oil and gas exports.

Western sanctions against Russia, Maguire adds, are tightening gold supplies and putting gold derivatives in danger. 

Ambrose Evans-Pritchard: China's coal revival may soon slash our energy bills but at wicked cost

Section: Daily Dispatches

By Ambrose Evans-Pritchard
The Telegraph, London
Friday, March 25, 2022

It would be a grim irony if the Chinese Communist Party rescues Europe from an energy shock this year by shovelling wagons of coal from the mines of Shanxi and Inner Mongolia, trashing the planet in the process.

Citigroup thinks this is exactly what may now happen. Surging coal use in China will displace imports of liquefied natural gas (LNG) used in power plants, freeing up hydrocarbons for the rest of the world. 

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Dollar reserve system frays with India-Russia currency deals

Section: Daily Dispatches

By David P. Goldman
Asia Times, Hong Kong
Saturday, March 26, 2022

Russia and India took a small but important step toward non-dollar trade financing and investment on Friday when the Reserve Bank of India allowed Russia to invest the proceeds of its arms sales to India in local-currency corporate bonds.

Russia's account with India's central bank is small, with a reported balance of US$262 million, but the prospective advantages to both countries are enormous.

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Russian central bank will resume buying gold from banks, doing so at fixed price

Section: Daily Dispatches

From Reuters
Friday, March 25, 2022

https://www.reuters.com/business/finance/russian-cenbank-restart-buying-gold-banks-will-pay-fixed-price-march-28-2022-03-25/

The Russian central bank will restart buying gold from banks and will pay a fixed price of 5,000 roubles ($52) per gram between March 28 and June 30, the bank said today.

Brien Lundin: Sanctioning Russia's gold reserves may boomerang against U.S.

Section: Daily Dispatches

By Brien Lundin
Gold Newsletter, Metairie, Louisiana
https://goldnewsletter.com/
Thursday, March 25, 2022

Any U.S. sanctions on Russia's gold reserves would do little more than reveal the degree to which government bureaucrats don't understand gold. 

The beauty of gold, unlike currencies, is that it is an untrackable store of value that has no counterparty. 

Alasdair Macleod: Designing a new currency is impractical

Section: Daily Dispatches

By Alasdair Macleod
GoldMoney, Toronto
Friday, March 25, 2022

Rising interest rates threaten to destabilise both financial asset values and the fiat currencies in which they are priced. This outcome is feared by the chattering classes who increasingly speculate about currency resets.

So far, we have seen cryptocurrencies such as bitcoin, plans for the introduction of central bank digital currencies, plans to de-dollarise Asian trade, and even El Salvador adopting bitcoin as legal tender. 
But are these resets valid?

U.S. dollar's dominance is being stealthily eroded

Section: Daily Dispatches

By Enda Curran
Bloomberg News
Thursday, March 24, 2022

The dollar's share of global reserve currencies has been in steady decline over the past 20 years as central banks turn to nontraditional currencies, including the renminbi, to diversify their holdings. 

Reserve managers have moved out of dollars in two directions, with one quarter headed into the renminbi and three quarters into currencies of smaller countries that have traditionally played a limited role as reserve assets.

Sanctioning Russia's gold won't work but may prompt repatriation from NY Fed, Lundin says

Section: Daily Dispatches

What Traders Think of U.S.-led Efforts to Block Gold Transactions by Russia's Central Bank

By Myra P. Saefong
MatketWatch, New York
Thursday, March 25, 2022

The U.S. made it clear on Thursday that any transaction involving gold related to the Central Bank of the Russian Federation is covered by existing sanctions, but that's unlikely to have an immediate impact on the gold market despite Russia's estimated $132 billion in gold stockpiles.

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