Houston passes law requiring photographs, fingerprints of gold sellers

"Houston City Council on Wednesday passed new rules on precious metals dealers despite a lengthy attempt to water down the ordinance by Councilwoman Helena Brown, who called it 'safety theater' that would burden businesses and invade jewelry sellers' privacy. Officers in the Houston Police Department's precious metals unit said reputable dealers already implement many of the new rules but said the ordinance - which requires a photograph and thumbprint of each seller and mandates dealers enter transactions into an online database - will help them catch crooks and recover stolen goods." Continue reading

Continue ReadingHouston passes law requiring photographs, fingerprints of gold sellers

Central Bank Snuffs Out Vietnam’s Thriving Gold Market

"There is such a demand to hold gold in Vietnam that the public is now holding some 300 to 500 tons of gold, totaling U.S $30 billion. Recently, however, the Vietnamese central bank disallowed loans in gold. Now, it is preventing banks from paying interest to customers on their gold. Instead, it is forcing banks to charge customer to store their gold, and requiring banks to regularly report on their transactions with account holders. What’s happening is that the government wants to prevent citizens from using alternatives to its own quickly devaluing currency. This, way, the government can continue to steal purchasing power from its citizens through inflation." Continue reading

Continue ReadingCentral Bank Snuffs Out Vietnam’s Thriving Gold Market

FATCA: Do I have to report my offshore gold?

"Imagine what would happen if the Chinese government passed a law requiring US banks to share customer information with Beijing. People would go nuts. But in the Land of the Free, it’s normal. Crazy. It gets worse. FATCA was a mere 18 pages of poorly worded legislation that failed to define critical terms. How many pages of regulations did the IRS issue? The answer is a mind numbing 544 pages. After an initial read, though, the language of the regulation does suggest that custodial gold institutions (like GoldMoney, etc.) should be reported. Offshore safety deposit boxes (like Das Safe) do not." Continue reading

Continue ReadingFATCA: Do I have to report my offshore gold?

U.S. gold bars and coins find new home overseas on Asian demand

"Booming demand for gold as a store of wealth among Asian investors is driving physical gold bars and coins out of the United States and into Asia. A growing number of gold vaults for affluent Asians and new precious metals investment products, particularly exchange-traded funds, have led to an exodus of gold owned privately from the United States into emerging economic powers such as China. On Friday, Commerce Department data showed U.S. exports of nonmonetary gold, which excludes central bank transactions, soared by 43 percent to $4 billion in December from the previous month." Continue reading

Continue ReadingU.S. gold bars and coins find new home overseas on Asian demand

European central banks to shun fresh gold sales limits

"The amount of gold the region's central banks can sell in any given period has been capped by a series of Central Bank Gold Agreements (CBGAs) since 1999, after a spate of disposals by the official sector, including a 395-tonne tonne sale by the Bank of England, shook up the bullion market. Prices are more than five times higher than they were when the first CBGA was signed by 15 central banks, including those of Germany, Italy and France as well as the European Central Bank, in 1999. That limited sales to 400 tonnes of gold per year, for a five-year period. Signatories struggled to stay within those limits." Continue reading

Continue ReadingEuropean central banks to shun fresh gold sales limits

Bipolar Silver: How to Profit

"Most precious-metals investors know that silver is more volatile than gold. But do they know just how big that difference really is? We thought it would be interesting to measure how much greater silver's daily moves are – both in gains and declines – than gold. We documented the daily price movements for both metals, and then calculated the difference using absolute values." Continue reading

Continue ReadingBipolar Silver: How to Profit

Gold ETFs in India touch 40 tonne (40,000 kilo)

"The government's import restrictions are hurting the populace. The only organisation not worried, as of now, are gold backed exchange traded funds. Worried investors are veering towards the country’s 14 gold exchange traded funds (ETFs), which together have garnered 40,000 kilo of the precious metal. Gold ETFs debuted in India about six years ago. The first gold ETF launched in 2007 by Benchmark Mutual Fund (now Goldman Sachs) was followed by 13 others in quick succession. The 14 mutual fund houses present in this segment are managing gold assets worth nearly $2.2 billion (Rs 120 billion)." Continue reading

Continue ReadingGold ETFs in India touch 40 tonne (40,000 kilo)

Putin Turns Black Gold Into Bullion as Russia Out-Buys World

"When Vladimir Putin says the U.S. is endangering the global economy by abusing its dollar monopoly, he’s not just talking. He’s betting on it. Not only has Putin made Russia the world’s largest oil producer, he’s also made it the biggest gold buyer. His central bank has added 570 metric tons of the metal in the past decade, a quarter more than runner-up China, according to IMF data compiled by Bloomberg. The added gold is also almost triple the weight of the Statue of Liberty." Continue reading

Continue ReadingPutin Turns Black Gold Into Bullion as Russia Out-Buys World

Up to 25% of India’s gold may be smuggled in

"An estimated quarter of the gold flowing into India is coming through irregular channels given the 'anti-gold' stance adopted by the government of one of the world's leading gold markets‚ Philip Klapwijk‚ global head of metal analytics at GFMS Thompson Reuters. 'You have a government that is clearly anti-gold in India and it is using the duty system to try hold back demand‚' he said. In January the government raised the duty on gold imports to 6% from 4%. 'What this is doing is stimulating the smuggling of gold into the country. It may be that at least a quarter of the gold coming into India is coming through unofficial channels‚' he said." Continue reading

Continue ReadingUp to 25% of India’s gold may be smuggled in