Tuesday May 9, 6:13 PM
China urged to quadruple gold reserves - paper
BEIJING, May 9 (Reuters) - Some Chinese economists are urging
Beijing to quadruple its gold reserves to 2,500 tonnes from the
current 600 tonnes because the country foreign exchange reserves
had become the world's largest, an official industry newspaper
reported on Tuesday.
"China should raise its gold reserves so those reserves can
account for 3 percent to 5 percent of the foreign exchange
reserves, instead of current 1.3 percent," the China Gold quoted
Liu Shanen, an expert at Beijing Gold Economy Development
Research Centre, as telling a conference.
He said the suggestion was made in light of the country's
economic strength and the size of its foreign trade.
China's foreign exchange reserves rose to a record $875.1
billion by the end of March on the back of a surge in its trade
surplus and an increase in foreign direct investment.
"More gold reserves will help the government prevent risks
and handle emergencies in case of future possible turbulence in
the international political and economic situation," the paper
said, citing Tan Yaling, a researcher with the Bank of China.
A weak dollar had also made more gold holdings necessary, it
quoted Liao Yingmin as saying. Liao is a researcher at the
Development Research Center of the State Council, a government
think-tank.
China has been trying to gradually diversify its reserve
holdings away from the dollar. But economists say fears of a
collapse in the U.S currency will prevent any dramatic shift.
Central bank official figures showed China's gold reserves
have remained unchanged since December 2002.
Gold has gained 32 percent this year due to tension in the
Middle East, firm oil prices and a volatile dollar. Spot gold was quoted at $679.90 an ounce by 0959 GMT.
Traders in London anticipated the price to test 25-year high
of $684.70 an ounce.
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