“The change in gold holdings is a result of the continuous and ongoing efforts by MAS to ensure that the Official Foreign Reserves portfolio remains well-diversified and resilient through economic and market conditions,” a MAS spokesperson said. “The change is a modest step in relation to the overall size of the OFR portfolio.”
MAS didn’t disclose how much it paid for the bullion, but at Tuesday’s price that would be about US$1.5 billion ($2.05 billion). The central bank’s total gold holdings amounted to about 154 tons, MAS data showed.
The central bank may have preferred to not draw attention to the amount of gold in its international reserves as this might encourage foreign-exchange markets to view the purchase as a move that strengthens the city-state’s reserve position and potentially put upward pressure on its exchange rate, according to a blog post by Ronan Manly, a precious metals analyst at Singapore dealer BullionStar.
Photo: Bloomberg