Friday, September 18, 2009

IMF to sell gold to support poor countries


Sep 19, 2009



IMF to sell gold to raise funds


WASHINGTON - THE International Monetary Fund said its executive board approved on Friday the sale of 403 tonnes of gold worth US$13 billion (S$18.7 billion), mainly aimed at boosting the institution's capacity to lend to poor countries.

The IMF said in a statement the sales would be 'in a volume strictly limited to 403.3 metric tonnes, with these sales to be conducted under modalities that safeguard against disruption of the gold market'.

The IMF said the decision was a central element of a new income model for the institution that had been approved by the executive board in April 2008.

The Group of 20 developed and developing countries decided at their April summit in London that the money raised by the gold sales should allow the IMF to offer favorable conditions on loans to the poorest countries.

The IMF said that the sale of gold 'will also increase the fund's resources for lending to low-income countries,' a strategy that won board backing in July.

The amount of gold is one-eighth of the current holdings of the Washington-based IMF, one of the world's biggest holders of the precious metal.


'I am delighted that the executive board has given its overwhelming backing to a strictly limited sale of fund gold to put the financing of the IMF on a sound long-term footing, and enable us to step up much-needed concessional lending to the poorest countries,' IMF managing director Dominique Strauss-Kahn said in the statement.

'These sales will be conducted in a responsible and transparent manner that avoids disruption of the gold market,' he said.

The IMF did not state the value of the gold to be sold but based on the current bullish market price for the metal, it is estimated that the sale would fetch US$13 billion.

Under the approved plan, the IMF would offer to sell gold directly to central banks 'or other official sector holders if there were to be interest from such holders.' The IMF said such transactions would redistribute official gold holdings without changing total official holdings.

Under the fund's Articles of Agreement, all gold sales must be conducted at market prices, including direct sales to official holders.

Also the gold sales could be conducted on-market in a phased manner over time, and such on-market gold sales will not add to the announced volume of official sales, it said. -- AFP

and...

IMF to sell gold to support poor countries


2009-09-19 06:14:03

WASHINGTON, Sept. 18 (Xinhua) -- The executive board of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) approved Friday to sell 403.3 tonnes of gold to help poor countries.


The IMF said in a statement that the decision was a central element of a new income model for the institution that had been approved by the executive board in April 2008.

The sales would be "in a volume strictly limited to 403.3 metric tons, with these sales to be conducted under modalities that safeguard against disruption of the gold market." said the IMF.

The sale of gold "will also increase the fund's resources for lending to low-income countries," a strategy that won board backing in July.


The action, authorized by the Group of 20 (G20) countries at their summit in London in April, mainly aimed at boosting the IMF's capacity to lend to poor countries.

The IMF, a 186-nation Washington-based lending institution, is the third-largest official holder of gold in the world after the United States and Germany.

As the world leading 20 developed and developing countries are gathering next week in Pittsburgh, the IMF urged the group a day ago to help poorer countries to tackle crisis.

"We must make sure that any global recovery also lifts the low-income countries. These countries desperately need additional financing to tide them over, to give them adequate breathing space to cope with this crisis", said Managing Director Dominique Strauss-Kahn Thursday in a speech in Washington, DC.