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Singapore introduces central bank gold vaulting services and an OTC gold clearing system

Singapore is establishing an over-the counter gold clearing system and introducing central bank gold vaulting services. This comes as the city state looks to establish itself as a gold trading hub.

Gan Kim Yong, the Deputy Prime Minister, told the Asia-Pacific Precious Metals conference on Monday that the Singapore Exchange will?establish a gold clearing system over-the-counter for Loco Singapore or physical gold in Singapore by the end this year.

He said that six banks will be clearing members: DBS, Deutsche Bank ICBC Standard Bank J.P. Morgan OCBC, UOB.

Gan stated that the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) will offer central bank vaulting services in October to give foreign central banks and sovereign entities a safe option to store gold reserves.

Gan stated that this strengthened Singapore's position as a jurisdiction in which reserve assets could be held securely, managed actively, and connected to wider market liquidity during Asian Trading Hours.

He said that the SGX was also looking into a gold futures contract which would improve price discovery and risk-management in Loco Singapore. The MAS is removing a 5% limit on investment in precious metals as part of 'tax incentive schemes' for family offices and funds that qualify. Changes were made by a working group that was formed earlier this year. They are part of a series moves taken by local banks in order to "broaden" gold trading, as well as other financial centers looking to expand their gold services. Reports in May indicated that the Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing was also planning to relaunch futures for gold, as the city strives to become a global hub for gold trading. DBS, Singapore’s largest?bank based on assets, announced last week that it would offer tokenised gold to retail customers. Meanwhile, OCBC, a competitor, has said they will allow institutional and private banking clients to buy, sell, and store gold in Singapore. (Reporting and editing by John Mair; Reporting by Jun Yuan Yong)

(source: Reuters)