Public confidence worth its weight in gold
HA NOI - The Government has instructed the State Bank of
Experts have
suggested several ways to do this, including the issuance of gold deposit
certificates that can be used in derivatives market transactions, which would
mean the reestablishment of gold exchange floors, this time with much firmer
legal and technical frameworks that would prevent market destabilising
movements.
They caution,
however, that a fresh attempt to mobilise gold would only be effective if
public concerns are seriously addressed.
In the past, the
focus has been on "larger national interests" that failed to
consider the factors behind the Vietnamese public's long-standing tradition
of hoarding gold, which they see as the safest investment and insurance in
times of economic and financial uncertainty.
The Government's
latest instructions have come after three years of applying several
administrative measures to encourage people to release their gold hoardings
and settle the "disorder" that the domestic market for the yellow
metal had experienced over the past several years.
The disorder,
which included significant price differences between domestic and world gold prices
and the impacts of speculative activities, has been blamed by many experts on
weak legal and technical frameworks that governed the market.
The situation was
exacerbated by developments in the forex market that undermined public
confidence in the domestic currency.
In response, the
State Bank of
Last year ended
with the closure of gold deposits as well as the end of a 12-year bull run on
gold, domestic prices of which plunged 24 per cent year-on-year towards the
year-end.
Vu Viet Ngoan,
Chairman of the National Financial Supervisory Committee, said that given the
perspective that the decline in local gold prices was in keeping with the
world trend, the central bank's moves have stabilised the domestic market.
World gold prices
plunged 28 per cent in 2013 after the US Federal Reserve announced plans to
reverse its ultra-loose monetary policy starting January 2014, diminishing
gold's appeal as a hedge against inflation.
With
The administrative
measures applied in the gold market thus far is likened to a tactic employed
by Vietnamese children to catch cave crickets. They block all except one exit
with solid objects and pump water into a nest. The crickets have no choice
but to escape through the only exit that is open, allowing the children to
capture them easily.
However,
"capturing" hoarded gold might not be that easy.
They suggest that
the central bank issues gold deposit certificates for fixed-term deposits
that cannot be withdrawn before the maturity date. Gold deposits mobilised
thus can be used as collateral at foreign credit institutions to borrow
foreign currencies at cheaper costs. The capital thus raised can be used to
further socio-economic development, they say.
They also say that
to facilitate this process, policymakers need to prepare "competent
legal and financial grounds," as also a derivatives market where the
gold deposit certificates can be traded easily.
However, they
hasten to add that no measure can be effective unless public concerns are
allayed and the gold deposit certificates have the liquidity that allows
owners to use them for purposes that gold had been traditionally used for,
like buying major assets including land and other properties. - VNS
by Ha Phuong
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Thứ Ba, 14 tháng 1, 2014
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