União Europeia abre portas ao assalto às reservas de ouro!
Elisa Ferreira (PS) e Nuno Melo (CDS), membros efectivos da comissão do Parlamento Europeu ECON (Economic and Monetary Affairs), votaram no passado dia 24 de Maio um relatório, aprovado por unanimidade, a favor do uso das reservas de ouro dos países europeus como colateral do endividamento soberano. Este relatório será levado ao Parlamento Europeu no próximo dia 30 de Junho para discussão e aprovação.
Apesar da opacidade do sítio do Parlamento Europeu nesta matéria, a verdade é que a informação chegou ao World Gold Council, e está a ser objecto de comentários muito ácidos por parte de alguma imprensa económica especialmente atenta e independente. Por aqui, o António Maria gostaria de conhecer o que têm a dizer os deputados portugueses citados e que aparentemente terão votado este “compromisso”.
Perguntamos também ao Governador do Banco de Portugal, Carlos Costa, o que pensa sobre a possível alienação do ouro português, acumulado em boa medida por Salazar, na fogueira imparável dos Derivados Financeiros — um buraco negro, entre 10 a 12x o PIB mundial, que ameaça estagnar o planeta num inferno de deflação e inflação sucessivas ao longo desta década.
The Economic and Monetary Affairs Committee of the European Parliament has approved gold to be used as collateral confirming its status as a high-quality liquid asset
Yesterday’s unanimous agreement by the European Parliament’s Committee on Economic and Monetary Affairs (ECON) to allow central counterparties to accept gold as collateral, under the European Market Infrastructure Regulation (EMIR), is further recognition of gold’s growing relevance as a high quality liquid asset. This vote reinforces market demand for a greater choice of assets that can be used as collateral to meet margin liabilities. World Gold Council, 25.05.2011 (PDF).
The European Gold Confiscation Scheme Unfolds: European Parliament Approves Use Of Gold As Collateral
Wonder why Europe is pressing so hard for Greece (and soon the other PIIGS) to collateralize its pre-petition loans on a Debtor in Possession basis? Here is your answer: "Yesterday’s unanimous agreement by the European Parliament’s Committee on Economic and Monetary Affairs (ECON) to allow central counterparties to accept gold as collateral, under the European Market Infrastructure Regulation (EMIR), is further recognition of gold’s growing relevance as a high quality liquid asset. This vote reinforces market demand for a greater choice of assets that can be used as collateral to meet margin liabilities." Luckily for Greece, it has 111.5 tons of gold in storage (somewhere at the New York Fed most likely). Looking down the road, Portugal has 382.5 tons, Spain 281.6, and Italy leads the pack with 2,451.8 tons. Zero Hedge.
Aparentemente confidencial:
Compromise on Article 43
Collateral requirements
1. A CCP [Central Counterparty Clearing House] shall accept highly liquid collateral, such as cash, gold, government and high quality corporate bonds, with minimal credit and market risk to cover its initial and ongoing exposure to its clearing members. For non-financial counterparties, CCPs may accept bank guarantees taking into account such guarantees in exposure to a bank that is a clearing member. It shall apply adequate haircuts to asset values that reflect the potential for their value to decline over the interval between their last revaluation and the time by which they can reasonably be assumed to be liquidated. It shall take into account the liquidity risk following the default of a market participant and the concentration risk on certain assets that may result in establishing the acceptable collateral and the relevant haircuts. These minimum standards shall be calibrated in accordance with the risk level and shall be regularly revised to reflect market conditions and in particular in response to emergency situations where it is concluded that doing so will mitigate systemic risk. [GREENs]. (AM 111 - Langen, AM 850 - Luvigsson, AM 851 - Swinburne, AM 852 - Balz, AM 853 - Schmidt).
2. A CCP may accept, where appropriate and sufficiently prudent the underlying of the derivative contract or the financial instrument that originate the CCP exposure as collateral to cover its margin requirements.
3. In order to ensure consistent harmonisation of this Article, ESMA, in consultation with ESRB and EBA, shall develop draft regulatory technical standards specifying the type of collateral that can be considered highly liquid and the haircuts referred to in paragraph 1. ESMA, in consultation with the ESCB and EBA, shall submit drafts on those regulatory technical standards to the Commission by 30 June 2012. (AM 860 - Langen).
Power is delegated to the Commission to adopt the regulatory technical standards referred to in the first subparagraph in accordance with Articles 10 to 14 of Regulation …/… [ESMA Regulation]. (AM 861 - Langen)