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Re: LODE MAKING ME RICH post# 15738

Monday, 01/31/2011 9:32:14 PM

Monday, January 31, 2011 9:32:14 PM

Post# of 24341
China Should Buy More Gold, Silver for Reserves, Daily Reports

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-01-31/china-should-buy-more-gold-silver-for-reserves-daily-reports.html



China should increase its gold and silver reserves, the Economic Information Daily reported today, citing an interview with central bank adviser Xia Bin.

Increasing gold reserves at the “appropriate time” is in line with the strategy of internationalizing the yuan, the report cited Xia as saying. “Related departments” should employ a “buy in the dip” strategy over a very long period of time, Xia said.

Bullion soared nearly 30 percent in 2010, advancing for the 10th year, as the dollar dropped and investors sought a store of value amid currency debasement. China is allowing greater use of its currency for cross-border transactions, seeking to reduce reliance on the dollar.

The report is “a positive factor for gold prices in the mid-and-long term,” Hwang Il Doo, a senior trader at Seoul- based Korea Exchange Bank Futures Co., said today. Still “it didn’t have immediate impact on prices as gold’s gain has more to do with the unrest in Egypt at the moment.”

Total gold consumption in China, the second-largest buyer, may gain 15 percent in the first half, fueled by growing demand for alternative investments and a hedge against inflation, the China Gold Association said last week.

Imports of gold by China jumped almost fivefold in the first 10 months of last year from the entire amount shipped in 2009, the Shanghai Gold Exchange has said. Shipments were 209 metric tons compared with 45 tons for all of 2009, said exchange Chairman Shen Xiangrong.

The country increased gold reserves by 454 tons to 1,054 tons since 2003, the State Administration of Foreign Exchange said in April 2009. The metal only accounts for 1.6 percent of the nation’s reserves held by the People’s Bank of China, according to the World Gold Council. China doesn’t regularly publish gold-trade figures and rarely comments on its reserves.

Immediate-delivery bullion gained as much as 0.7 percent to $1,346.27 an ounce, and was at $1,339.25 at 12:53 p.m. in Seoul. The price rose 2.5 percent on Jan. 28, the biggest intraday increase since Nov. 4 as escalating tensions in Egypt fanned concern that unrest may spread to other parts of the Middle East, increasing demand for an investment haven.

Xia’s remarks echo comments he made last month in an opinion piece for the China Business News.

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