TreasureHunter said:
Pirocco said:
TreasureHunter said:
If China holds 1.3 % of its reserves in gold, then it has a lot more buying to do to reach the Germany-France 60-70 % range.
Brazil with its 0.2 % is way below.
Where does that Germany-France % origin from?
The European Central Bank has just 15% of its reserves in gold (and that even includes swapped).
From the video... ask Silver 2012 for the source of his figures.
The thing is, those 60-70% figures are % of Forex reserves, being the reserves in foreign currency, not own currency. Country states/central banks' Forex reserves are only a part of their reserves, so countries with a bigger pool Forex reserves will tend to have lower gold/Forex ratio's.
Just look at the numbers on
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Official_gold_reserves
Germany has 3,390.6 tonnes gold as 66% of Forex reserves (so non euro currency)
France has 2,435.4 tonnes gold as 65% of Forex reserves. (so non euro currency)
US has 8,133.5 tonnes gold as 70% of Forex reserves (so non dollar currency)
China has 1,054.1 tonnes gold as 1% of Forex reserves.(so non yuan currency)
Take for ex Germany/China, Germany has 3 times the amount gold of China.
But the % of Forex of the Germany is 66 times the % of Forex of China.
For example, China can reach the same gold to Forex ratio as Germany, not by buying more gold but instead just lowering its foreign currency reserves.
So claiming that China would have to 'catch up' their %, well they can, without buying gold.
So I then wonder about the topics questions answer. Take for ex the US dollar reserves in the world. The total now is two times the 2008 total, ex China has now double dollar Forex reserves than in 2008. So this alone halved their gold to Forex ratio, without any purchasing/selling of gold involved.
And this example case makes your claim "If China holds 1.3 % of its reserves in gold, then it has a lot more buying to do to reach the Germany-France 60-70 % range." as a 'NOT has to'.