Russia is buying gold. A lot of gold. Within the span of a decade, the country quadrupled its reserves. Gold buying last year exceeded mine supply for the first time, so Russia is about to become a net importer of the metal.
Commentators have suggested possible reasons for the buying spree. Are the Russian authorities preparing for a renewed clash with the United States and are they attempting to reduce their vulnerability to financial sanctions? Or do they fear a homegrown financial crisis?
Others suspect something bigger may be at play.
The sheer size of the purchases might reveal bolder motives, with Moscow preparing its first salvo in the coming battle for a monetary reset.
What makes the recent moves especially significant is the fact they are being replicated in Beijing. According to official data, China raised its bullion reserves to 60.62 million ounces in March from 60.26 million a month earlier; last month’s inflow was 11.2 tons, following the addition of 9.95 tons in February, 11.8 tons in January and 9.95 tons in December.
China may actually end the year as the top buyer after Russia. Right now it looks like a close race.
The purchases are unlikely to have been coordinated by Russia and China, but some mutual influence is evident: the two countries expect to benefit from the other’s purchases, which should be supportive of long-term prices.
These moves come at a moment when gold has become attractive as the anchor for new experiments in digital currencies. Gold and crypto are a marriage made in heaven, combining the stability of gold with the convenience and security of the blockchain.
The surge in interest in the concept of gold-backed cryptocurrencies has raised the question of whether one of the many experiments being launched can aspire to become a leading global currency.
Only a sovereign could amass the quantities of gold needed. Does this mean that Russia is considering the idea? Venezuela and Iran have made some attempts already. Rumors have been circulating for a while that the Russian authorities are interested in taking plans to a new level, perhaps with China and other partners.
Here is how the scheme might work. Money would circulate in the form of blockchain entries provided by a global platform and be entirely backed by gold reserves held in an international trust insulating them from state interference.
Different private financial institutions would be responsible for issuance operations and, therefore, for ultimate control over the money supply. Money transactions would be processed directly between end users, with no intermediation from banks or governments.
Russia and China have openly complained that the dollar is no longer able to fulfill its role of global currency.
That may well be true. Rumblings of discontent come from President Trump himself, ingloriously struggling against a ballooning external deficit. But if the dollar is flawed, what would one say of China's currency the renminbi? Those contemplating how the dollar is to be superseded must look for something dramatically novel and superior.
If the two forces shaking the global monetary system — digital acceleration and geopolitical rivalry — were to come together, change could happen quickly and suddenly.
Financial technology is transforming every element of the existing financial architecture and there is reason to believe that money will not remain a holdout for much longer. The internet has created opportunities for the quick growth of global networks that once seemed beyond the realm of possibility.
If certain internet platforms already exceed two billion users globally — a network dwarfing the largest national states on earth — what is there to stop a cryptocurrency from taking advantage of the same growth dynamics?
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