Is The Swiss Gold Initiative Incompatible With EUR/CHF Peg?

 | Oct 26, 2014 02:07AM ET

This is every gold bull's dream. The Swiss just might force their central bank to begin accumulating massive amounts of gold via the so-called "Save our Swiss gold" referendum. The Swiss National Bank (SNB) unwound a large portion of its gold holdings prior to the financial crisis and now it could be forced to buy it back over the next five years. Here is what the accumulation is likely to look like assuming the rest of the balance sheet stays constant.

If the proposal passes in November, the SNB will also need to repatriate its physical gold holdings stored abroad (particularly in the US and the UK) back to Switzerland. The most difficult part of the law is that once the SNB buys any gold, it would no longer be permitted to sell the holdings at any time.

The law would require the SNB to hold at least 20% of its assets in gold (from less than 8% currently), likely forcing the central bank to unwind some of its foreign reserves.

To understand why the SNB would need to sell its FX reserves, let's start with a bit of background. The reason the SNB's foreign reserves are so elevated is to a large extent the result of the 2008 financial crisis and more importantly the Eurozone crisis. Since the default of Lehman and through the euro area debt turbulence, depositors/investors moved assets out of the Eurozone into Switzerland. They feared a potential collapse of EMU banks, haircuts on euro-denominated deposits (which is what ultimately happened in Cyprus), and even the breakup of the euro - followed by redenomination back to pre-euro currencies and devaluation of the lira, drachma, escudo, etc.

Many moved assets to the relative safety and independence of the Swiss franc, which resulted in Swiss currency's sharp appreciation against the euro (the chart below shows the euro depreciating against the franc).

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