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Unallocated gold is the most widely traded form of gold in the world. It hides
a way of advantaging the provider - usually a bank - by subjecting buyers to
a risk they will frequently remain unaware of until it is too late. The widely
quoted 'spot price' refers to this unallocated gold, and this is how it works
:-
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When a bank sells you unallocated gold on the spot market you become a
creditor - i.e. the bank owes you gold which you do not own. In law you become
a depositor of gold. Most people now relax in the belief that they own gold
securely in the bank, and they do not pay the little extra - above the spot
- to have their trade formally allocated.
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A bank is required by its regulator to hold a proportion of its liabilities
as certain types of assets capable of being turned into cash quickly during
times of crisis. It is a liquid reserve and it's there to protect
the bank from a common type of problem - a liquidity crisis - which occurs
when a bank has short term deposits, long term loans, and insufficient cash
to meet the immediate demand for withdrawals. Physical gold bars are accepted
as a very good form of liquidity reserve because they can be turned quickly
into cash.
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If a bank has physical possession of some gold which it owes you as its
creditor the bank itself is the current owner of the gold. While this gold
remains unallocated to you the regulator considers it part of a bank's liquid
reserve. This makes unallocated gold an attractive way for the bank to maintain
its regulated liquidity, because you have paid for your gold, and the bank
is free to use your money, while it is also able to add your unallocated
gold holding to its own reserve.
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So your unallocated gold would be ditched if the bank were in need of cash,
and it has no choice in the matter because liquid reserves are there to be
sold at short notice to protect the bank's general creditors - all of whom,
including you, must receive a proportionate share of whatever is raised from
the sale of these and other bank assets if the crisis were to deepen and
the bank were to become insolvent.
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If that did happen you would be in a bad position. The bank's usually small
gold reserve would be diluted by non-performing bond portfolios and other
assets which don't sell well in a crisis. The last line of defence for bank
depositors is deposit protection, which is a state underwritten mainstay
of banking confidence in the West. But it does not apply on bullion debts
like yours. Deposit protection is there as a confidence builder for the national
currency only, which means unallocated gold actually offers less protection
from bank failure than a cash deposit. So having been the provider of the
bank's liquidity reserve you will then be in the minority of those offered
no protection by the state's guarantee.
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So it is important not to be impressed by unallocated gold, or by it being
physically stored in a bank's vault, or by it being checked daily by bank
regulators. Regulators are checking it to make sure the bank maintains a
liquid reserve, and they are not especially interested in your entitlement
as a bullion creditor.
Allocated gold is different because you become the outright owner of gold
and you are no longer a creditor. Your allocated gold is your property and
it cannot be used as the bank's reserve, so with allocated gold you get proper
protection from systemic failure. Unfortunately with allocated gold your money
does the bank no good. And since modern banks reckon to earn 20% each year
on capital employed their loss of use of your allocated gold is disappointing
for them. This is why banks usually charge nothing for unallocated storage
and at least 1.5% per annum for allocated storage, with the result that professionals
in the bullion market reckon that less than 1% of gold traded within financial
markets is allocated.
This is how the huge majority of the world's owners of bank held gold are
- probably unwittingly - storing their personal reserve in a way which fails
to meet the most common objective of gold buyers.
Contact
author regarding this article.
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Regards,
Paul Tustain
BullionVault
Paul Tustain is the founder of BullionVault.com -
with 13,000 customers and $600m in gold bars, now the world's largest store
of privately-owned investment gold bullion.
Please Note: This article is to inform your thinking,
not lead it. Only you can decide the best place for your money, and any decision
you make will put your money at risk. Information or data included here may
have already been overtaken by events - and must be verified elsewhere - should
you choose to act on it.
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Vault
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