Submitted by Tyler
Durden
on 04/15/2013 08:05
The first time the Status Quo/Troika tried to force a (not so) stealthy gold
confiscation on an insolvent European country was back in early 2012, when as
part of the most recent Greek bailout MOU, it
was disclosed that "Greece’s lenders will have the right to seize the
gold reserves in the Bank of Greece under the terms of the new deal."
However, the public outcry was so loud that the Troika had no choice but to
shelve its plans and proceed with a full scale bondholder restructuring instead.
Fast forward to last week, when Europe's appetite for physical gold
came back with a bang, this time as part
of the Cyprus "Debt Sustainability Analysis", and subsequent comments
from Mario Draghi, demanding that tiny Cyprus, whose opposition, already
weakened by the confiscation of uninsured deposits would be far less vocal than
Greece's, sell off €400MM, or virtually all of its sovereign gold, over 10 of
its 13.9 total tons, to cover the excess costs of its ever ballooning sovereign
bailout.
So who's next? It remains to be seen, although we are certain there will be a
very clear correlation between the next country to see its gold "purchased" by
the status quo, likely some time in the next 1-3 months, and the amount of
total non-performing loans on said country's bank balance sheets. The
usual suspects are presented below.
And, in the parlance of Goldman Sachs, these countries better scramble to
sell, sell, sell now before gold hits 0, or maybe even goes negative.
Source: World Gold Council
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