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IMF says it got 'good price' for gold from India

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  • The International Monetary Fund, which sold 200 tonnes of gold for about $6.7 billion to the Reserve Bank of India, on Wednesday, said it got a "good price," and wants to be similarly "lucky" in the next phase sale of the precious metal.

    The sale price of gold to the RBI is expected to be under $1,045 per ounce, nearly $200 per ounce higher than what it would have been anticipated in mid-September, a senior IMF official told reporters in a teleconference.

    When the IMF Executive Board at its meeting on September 18 announced to sell 403.3 tonnes of gold -- one-eighth of the Fund's total holding - the prevailing market price of the bullion at that time was about $850 an ounce.

    "Obviously, it's a good price relative to the original assumptions," the IMF official said.

    The IMF, in pursuance of the decisions taken at the G-20 summit in London, had decided to sell about 403.3 tonnes of gold to shore up its finances so that it can lend money to the poor countries at concessional rates.

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    "Of course, this is only half the sale that we have completed, so we don't want to get ahead of ourselves. We still have another half to go. I hope we'll still be lucky," he said.

    The official said the good price received for its gold from India would certainly help the multilateral lending agency to meet its target of stepping up financing to poor countries.

    Meanwhile, market reports said the gold price jumped $30 per ounce in a day to reach an all time high of $1,087 per ounce on Tuesday, thus giving the RBI an instant profit of $42 per ounce of gold it bought from the IMF at an average rate of about $1,045 per ounce over a two weeks period.

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    noneBy: Mickey Schwarz | 04-Nov-2009 Reply | Forward I thought gold was measured in Troy Ounces. Doing the math....12 troy oz to a lb, 2000 lbs to a ton, 200 tons, paying $6.7B for 200 tons comes to $1395/oz....where's the other $350/oz? Or is someone trying to fool us into thinking that an ounce of gold is 1/16th of a pound? Or are we talking metric tons? What's the deal? Sounds fishy to me.
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