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gold reserve
(redirected from Gold reserves)

   Also found in: Wikipedia 0.06 sec.

gold reserve

Fund of gold bullion or coin held by a government or bank. In the past, banks accumulated gold reserves to fulfill their promise to pay their depositors in gold. Commercial banks received deposits subject to repayment in gold on demand and issued notes redeemable in gold on demand. Most gold reserves eventually shifted to central banks, which took over the function of issuing paper money. Gold reserves were moved again in the 1930s, when many governments required their central banks to turn over to the national treasuries all or most of their gold holdings. In the U.S., the Gold Reserve Act of 1934 required Federal Reserve banks to turn over all gold bullion or coin to the U.S. Treasury, which placed most of the reserves at Fort Knox.



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The system continued in the years of fragmentation that ensued, until it was fully replaced by the "gold standard" system of the British-led Industrial Revolution, whereby banknotes replaced gold coins on the strength of the gold reserves in the vault of the issuing banks.
Goldcorp announced its year-end gold reserves and resource estimates on Feb.
Confirmation this week from Germany's Bundesbank that it has been lending some of its 3,700 metric tons of gold reserves followed recent announcements by Switzerland that it may sell almost a third of its reserves, some 800 tons.
 
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