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Published: October 31, 2009
As you read this, the Chinese government is
doing an extraordinary thing... something nearly unheard of in
the modern world.
It is encouraging citizens to put at least 5% of their savings
into precious metals.
The Chinese government is telling people gold and silver are
good investments that will safeguard their wealth. After last
year's meltdown in the stock market, people believe it. After
all, Chinese citizens don't receive government retirement
money... and they don't have company pension plans like people
in many other countries do.
This is why folks in China are lining up outside of banks, post
offices, and the new official mint stores to buy gold and silver
(they especially like silver because it's cheaper per ounce).
The Chinese attitude toward gold and silver is a striking
contrast to the American attitude right now. I don't recall a TV
or radio ad from my congressman or President Obama encouraging
me to buy gold or silver. Does your bank sell silver bars? Are
gold mints popping up in your neighborhood? Are any of your
friends, family, or coworkers scrambling to buy precious metals?
In spite of a few ads on television and satellite radio, buying
gold and silver in the U.S. is still largely seen as a
fringe-group activity. That's not the case in China. And in the
big picture, there are three distinct trends occurring in China
today that many in the Occidental world are not paying attention
to.
First, look where China stands as a gold-producing nation.
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In 2008, China produced 9,070,000 ounces of
gold, exceeding all other countries. Further, its production
continues to rise, while many of the top-producing countries are
in decline.
Second, China had the lowest
per-capita gold consumption of any
country over the past half-century.
This year, it is widely expected
that Chinese demand for gold will
surpass that of India. In other
words, they'll also become the
world's No. 1 retail buyer.
Third, the Chinese government has
been using its foreign exchange
reserves to buy gold -- a lot of it
-- and doing so on the sly. This
past April, Chinese officials made a
surprise announcement that they had
been secretly buying gold since
2003, increasing their gold reserves
by +76% to 33,886,000 ounces. The
Chinese government now owns 30 times
the gold it held in 1990. And China
is believed to be a leading
candidate to buy some or all of the
12.9 million ounces the
International Monetary Fund says it
will sell.
But all this production and all this
buying isn't enough...
Even though China is the world's
seventh-largest holder of gold, gold
comprises but a tiny fraction of its
reserves, as shown in the table
below.
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What would happen to the gold price if China increased its
gold reserves to just 5%? What about 10%? To overtake the U.S.
as king of the gold hill, it would have to buy all the gold held
by the governments of France, Italy, and Germany combined. Can
China really do any of that?
At $1,000 gold, to push China's gold holdings to 5% of reserves
would take $55.3 billion; to 10% would cost $144.4 billion; to
be the world's top gold dog would run $227.6 billion.
Chinese reserves are approaching $2.3 trillion, of which almost
70%, or $1.6 trillion, are denominated in U.S. dollars. The cost
to become the world's biggest holder of gold would be a pittance
compared to the amount of money China has available. In other
words, money is not a problem.
Combining the country's massive holdings of dollars and the very
real likelihood those dollars are going to lose much of their
value, the motivation to buy tangible assets is urgent.
Further, keep this in mind: China's reserves continue to grow.
Therefore, the country must continue buying gold (or consuming
its own production) just to maintain the small gold-to-reserves
ratio it has, let alone increase it.
In addition to the government buying precious metals, Chinese
citizens will continue gobbling them up, too. Demographics alone
tell us why.
Government statistics show the average urban household in China
has about US$1,300 in disposable income. Multiply that by the
number of urban households in China and you come up with roughly
$36 billion in available capital.
According to precious metals consultancy CPM Group, about 9.5
million ounces of gold will be turned into coins this year
(including "rounds" and medallions). At $1,000 gold, that's $9.5
billion, or only about one-third of the capital available in
China.
The number is more striking for silver: Total coin production
this year is expected to hit 35 million ounces, equaling $615
million or just 1.7% of the available capital in China. Of
course, a lot of Chinese people want cars and refrigerators,
etc., but it won't take much of a shift of this capital into
gold and silver to have a major impact on the global retail
precious metals market. It may already be under way.
And long-term projections show the demographic trend won't slow
down: The middle class in China is expected to increase by +70%
by 2020. So over these next 10 years, more Chinese and more
money will be coming into the precious-metals markets, all at a
time when inflation is almost certain to be high, adding to gold
and silver's appeal. Couple this with China's long-standing
cultural affinity for gold and you have the makings for a
potentially life-changing gold rush.
If I were a crime detective, I'd say China has the motive,
means, and opportunity to push gold and gold stocks much higher.
-- Jeff Clark
Editor
Casey Research
Editor's Note: This
article originally appeared in
Daily Wealth. |