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Russia of course has plenty of gold bullion.[ATTACH=full]139296[/ATTACH]BUT, - not much good to them if they can't use itAnd like oil, Russia holds some of the world's largest reserves of gold — some 2,300 tons of it, worth nearly $140 billion.The huge reserves of the precious metal were built up over the past decade and a half, and were intended to be a sort of economic insurance policy for the country.But as with oil, sanctions are making it incredibly difficult for Russia to actually realize the value of its holdings."This is why they bought their gold, it was for a situation just like this," Cork University Business School lecturer Fergal O'Connor told Bloomberg. "But if no one will trade it with you, it doesn't matter."Last week, London's gold marketplace — the most important center in the world for bullion — banned all bars from Russian refineries, effectively shutting it out of the global trade.The US Senate followed that move with a new bill that would prohibit US citizens from making any transaction that involves Russian gold. "Russia's massive gold supply is one of the few remaining assets that Putin can use to keep his country's economy from falling even further," Maine Sen. Angus King said in a statement. "By sanctioning these reserves, we will further isolate Russia from the world's economy and increase the difficulty of Putin's increasingly-costly military campaign."
Russia of course has plenty of gold bullion.
[ATTACH=full]139296[/ATTACH]
BUT, - not much good to them if they can't use it
And like oil, Russia holds some of the world's largest reserves of gold — some 2,300 tons of it, worth nearly $140 billion.
The huge reserves of the precious metal were built up over the past decade and a half, and were intended to be a sort of economic insurance policy for the country.
But as with oil, sanctions are making it incredibly difficult for Russia to actually realize the value of its holdings.
"This is why they bought their gold, it was for a situation just like this," Cork University Business School lecturer Fergal O'Connor told Bloomberg. "But if no one will trade it with you, it doesn't matter."
Last week, London's gold marketplace — the most important center in the world for bullion — banned all bars from Russian refineries, effectively shutting it out of the global trade.
The US Senate followed that move with a new bill that would prohibit US citizens from making any transaction that involves Russian gold.
"Russia's massive gold supply is one of the few remaining assets that Putin can use to keep his country's economy from falling even further," Maine Sen. Angus King said in a statement. "By sanctioning these reserves, we will further isolate Russia from the world's economy and increase the difficulty of Putin's increasingly-costly military campaign."
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