home

Articles

Risk Blog

Traders Blog

Books

Tools

Links

FAQ Page


Gold Carry Trade

Google
 
Web www.software-risk.co.uk

A carry trade where you borrow and pay interest in order to buy something else that has higher interest. The gold carry trade works as follows. A central bank loans a bank (sometimes called a bullion bank) some gold. The gold lease rate is usually very low. The bullion bank immediately sells the gold and invests in securities with a higher rate of return, such as government long-term bonds. The carry return is the return on the bonds minus the gold lease rate. However, this trade is risky on two dimensions. First, if the bullion bank invested in long-term bonds and the interest rate goes up, the trade could be unprofitable. More seriously, the bullion bank has effectively sold the gold short. If the loan is called by the Central bank and if gold has risen in value, the bullion bank will have to go into the market and purchase higher priced gold. Indeed, if many banks are short, the unwinding of the gold carry trade could drive the gold price even higher. Related: Carry Trade.

Copyright © 2005, Campbell R. Harvey. All Worldwide Rights Reserved. Do not reproduce without explicit permission.

Related Articles
Bank Of England Cuts Interest Rates to 4.5%
Nugget
Currency Carry Trade
Cost-of-carry market
Central bank
Carry Trade
Bullion coins
NYMEX Offers Real-Time Quotes

Similar Areas

Finance Items

Selected Books

Keywords

Gold Carry Trade

gold

carry trade

central bank

bullion

bullion bank

gold lease


See our Sarbanes-Oxley compliance, load testing and Financial Glossary pages.
Articles   Books   FAQ Page   home   Jobs   Links   Reviews Page   Tools  
Booklist   books   Measurement   Testing   Tools