|
The World's Gold
Keeper
Far beneath the rush of
daily activity at the New York fed lies one of the wonders of the
modern world: the gold vault. The following excerpt from New York's
"key to the gold vault" gives readers a first-hand glance at the
operations of and history behind the federal reserve system's only
gold vault. Complete file with photos in PDF
format It's a large file, give it time to load then save it to
your disk for easy and fast reading. 7.75 megs.
- G o l d -
Visitors to lower
Manhattan usually are impressed by the financial community's frenzied
pace. The people working in its offices and the pedestrians on its
streets never appear to slow down. However, one of the financial
district's least hectic places provides one of its most impressive
sights: the gold in the vault of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.

Resting on the bedrock of
Manhattan Island, 80 feet below street level, is the world's largest
known accumulation of gold. The gold vault of the Federal Reserve Bank
of New York attracts more than 22,000 visitors a year. The bank does
not own the gold; it serves as its custodian. Almost all of the gold
bars or bullion belongs to foreign central banks and international
monetary organizations.
The gold is secured in a
most unusual vault, an impressive chamber nearly half the length of a
football field. It contained approximately 315 million troy ounces of
gold early in 1991, comprising approximately 26 percent of the world's
official monetary gold reserves. The value of the gold in the vault
was $13 billion at the official U.S. government price of $42.2222 per
troy ounce, or about $126 billion at a market price of $400 an ounce.
At the current official U.S. government price, one of the vault's 400
troy ounce gold bars is valued at about $17,000. At a market price of
$400 a troy ounce, the same bar is worth about $160,000.
The reasons why foreign
governments store their gold at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York
can be summarized in three words: confidence, convenience and
centrality.
-
Confidence results from
the bank being part of the Federal Reserve System, an agency of the
U.S. government and the nation's central bank. The political
stability and economic strength of the United States, as well as the
physical security provided by the bank's vault are important
factors.
-
Convenience accrues from
the international operations of the Federal Reserve Bank of New
York. Besides handling foreign financial transactions for the U.S.
Department of the Treasury and the Federal Reserve System, the bank,
acting as an agent, often executes financial transactions in the
United States for foreign central banks.
-
Centrality is due to the
bank's location. Having gold deposited in the trade and financial
capital of the world's largest economy enables international
payments to be made easily, quickly and inexpensively. The ability
to make gold transfers between nations within the confines of the
vault merely by moving bars from the compartment of one country to
another was a major attraction.
A Shipment Arrives
The gold stored in the bank is in the form of bars resembling
construction bricks. When the gold is shipped to the bank it is
stacked on wooden pallets like those used in warehouses. To reach the
vault, the bullion-laden pallets must be loaded into one of the bank's
"security" elevators and sent down five floors below street level to
the vault floor. The elevator's movements are controlled by an
operator located in a distant room who is in contact by intercom with
the armed guards who are accompanying the shipment.
Once inside the vault, the
gold bars become the responsibility of a control group, consisting of
representatives of three of the bank's divisions: auditing, vault
services and protection. A member of each of the three divisions must
be present whenever gold is moved or whenever anyone, even the bank's
president, enters the vault.
All bars brought into the
vault are carefully checked and weighed. These steps are critical,
since the weight and purity of a bar determine its value and
acceptability in international transactions. A power hoist lifts the
gold onto an old-fashioned, but very precise, balance scale. It weighs
gold to the nearest 1/100 of a troy ounce, equal to one-third the
weight of a dollar bill. The vault control group verifies the weight,
serial number and the purity measure stamped on each bar against an
accompanying manifest.
If everything is in order,
the gold is moved to one or more of the vault's 122 compartments
assigned to depository countries or placed in one of the "library"
compartments shared by several countries, where the gold is stored on
shelves. The bars are stacked in a compartment one at a time in an
overlapping pattern similar to that used to stabilize a brick wall.
Each compartment is secured by a padlock, two combination locks and an
auditor's seal. Three members of the vault control group, which is
responsible for these locks, must be present whenever a compartment is
opened or closed.
The Fed does not charge
for holding gold, but a nominal handling fee is levied when gold
enters, is moved within or is shipped out of the vault. Compartments
are identified by number rather than by the names of gold owners.
Nations, like individuals, prefer to keep their bank balances private.
Only a few bank employees are allowed to know the identity of gold
owners.
The gold in compartment
number 86, which faces the vault entrance, is arranged as a display.
The compartment contains 5,160 bars valued at about $87.1 million at
the official rate of $42.2222 and $825.6 million based on a market
price of $400 an ounce. Its capacity of about 6,000 bars makes it one
of the smaller compartments. The largest compartment contains about
107,000 bars--literally a wall of gold 10 feet high, 10 feet wide and
18 feet deep-- valued at about $1.8 billion at the official rate and
$17.1 billion at a market price of $400 an ounce.
Security is Essential
The gold is secured by the vault's design, which is a masterpiece of
protective engineering. The gold vault is actually the bottom floor of
a three-story bunker of vaults arranged like strongboxes stacked on
top of one another. The massive walls surrounding the vault are made
of reinforced structural concrete.
There are no doors into
the gold vault. Entry is through a narrow 10- foot passageway cut in a
delicately balanced 9-feet tall, 90-ton steel cylinder that revolves
vertically in a 140-ton steel and concrete frame. The vault is opened
and closed by rotating the cylinder 90 degrees so that the passageway
is clear or blocked. An airtight and watertight seal is achieved by
lowering the slightly tapered cylinder three-eighths of an inch into
the frame, similar to pushing a cork down into a bottle. It is secured
in place when two levers insert eight large bolts recessed inside the
frame into the cylinder. By unlocking a series of time and combination
locks, the vault can be opened the next business day. The locks are
under "multiple control"--no individual has all of the combinations
necessary to open the vault.
The bank and its vaults
are guarded by one of the largest private, uniformed protection forces
in the nation. Each guard must qualify periodically with a revolver on
the bank's firing range. Although the minimum requirement is a
marksman's score, most qualify as experts. In addition, the bank's
guards must be proficient with other weapons. Additional security is
provided by closed-circuit television monitors and by an electronic
surveillance system that alerts the central guardroom when a vault
door is opened or closed. The alarm system can signal guards to seal
all security areas and bank exits.
An examination of the gold
bars stored in the vault can provide an indication of their origin and
history. The shape of a bar may indicate whether it was cast in the
United States or abroad. Before 1986, bars cast in this country were
generally rectangular bricks, 7 inches by 3-5/8 inches long and
between 1-5/8 inches and 1-3/4 inches thick. In recent years, however,
gold bars cast in the United States and most bars cast abroad have
been trapezoidal.
It is sometimes possible
to tell by the shape of a bar where it was cast: bars from the Denver
Mint have rounded corners while those formed at the New York or San
Francisco Assay Offices have sharp corners.
Occasionally, visitors see
bars that are smaller than others. These bars, nicknamed "Hershey
bars," are formed at the end of the casting process when there is not
enough molten gold left in the smelter's crucible to produce a full
bar. Since the purity of gold in different pourings varies, any
remaining metal cannot be added to other pourings. Instead, it must be
cast into a separate bar.
Gold at a Glance
Most of the bars contain gold from four areas of the world. South
Africa is the largest producer, supplying about one-half of all newly
mined gold. Russia ranks second, accounting for one-fifth of the gold
produced each year. Canada and the United States are other important
sources of gold. Most of the gold is extracted from rock veins reached
by open pit mines or by mine shafts extending thousands of feet
underground. A small share of the gold comes from nuggets found on the
surface of the earth and from particles washed into the beds of
streams and rivers.
Relatively old European
bars scarred from years of handling can be found in the vault. These
imperfections do not affect the value of a bar, since most scars
result from dents rather than chips. Occasionally, the edge of a bar
may appear to have been notched. This cut was made by the owner's
assayer to sample the purity of the bar's gold. After testing, assay
"chips" are added to the gold used to make other bars.
Monetary Gold
It is estimated that the gold in the vault represents a significant
portion of the gold that has been mined throughout history. Most of
the gold in existence today was mined during the 20th century, much of
it since the end of World War II. The International Monetary Fund
reported that world gold reserves totaled about 1,145 million troy
ounces at the end of 1990. The United States owned 23 percent of this
monetary gold, an amount about equal to the combined holdings of West
Germany, France and Switzerland.
The bullion in the vault
belonging to the U.S. government represents a very small fraction of
the nation's gold reserves. The government stores U.S. gold in other
vaults. More than half of it is held in depositories at Fort Knox,
Ky., and West Point, N.Y. Most of the remainder is at the Denver and
Philadelphia mints and the San Francisco Assay Office. Totaling about
262 million ounces at the end of 1990, the gold reserves of the United
States are officially valued at about $11 billion. If they were valued
at the market price of gold, say $400 an ounce, the government's gold
reserve would be worth $105 billion, equivalent to $420 for each U.S.
resident. It also means that every time the price of gold fluctuates
by just one cent, the market value of the Treasury's reserves rises or
falls by about $2.6 million.
Intriguing Provenance
Suppositions about the origins of the gold in the vault must be
conjecture. However, since the metal is virtually indestructible, much
of the gold used for monetary and decorative purposes over the
centuries remains in existence today. It is possible that some of it
could have been used in smelting the gold used to form the older bars
in the vault. Some of the gold could have come from ancient coins, for
gold has been used as a currency since the sixth century B.C.
The search for gold over
time has had a great influence on world events. Some of the vault's
gold could have a long and fascinating history. Gold has been used for
decorative purposes since 3,000 B.C. and some of it could have been
melted down into bullion. The gold could have been found in the tombs
of the pharaohs and captured from the Greeks by the Romans. Some of
the gold could have been brought to Queen Isabella by Columbus. It
could have been looted from the Aztecs and Incas by the Conquistadores
as well as captured from Spanish treasure ships by Sir Francis Drake.
A portion of the gold in
the vault could have been panned near Sutter's Mill in California or
discovered during the Yukon gold rush. Some of the bullion deposits
could have been spirited away from Hitler's advancing armies across
the Atlantic Ocean by U-boat menaced Allied convoys. However, most of
the gold has a more recent and far less interesting background.
Nonetheless, whatever its origin, the gold stored in the vault of the
Federal Reserve Bank of New York is an impressive sight.
|