Broker ICAP in race to replace gold fix

Published Oct 2, 2014

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Clara Denina London

ICAP, the world’s biggest interdealer broker, would submit a proposal to the bullion market to replace the century-old global price benchmark for gold known as the “fix”, the company said yesterday.

Representatives from a handful of banks have run the current version of the gold fix, set twice a day by telephone, since 1919. Producers, consumers and investors use the benchmark to trade the metal and value their holdings.

Regulators have focused on precious metal benchmarks since the Libor interest rate-rigging scandal broke in 2012, leading the London Bullion Market Association and the four banks administering the gold fix to launch a request-for-proposals process last month.

Sources said that at least 15 companies had expressed interest in replacing the London gold benchmark. The new benchmark will need to comply with the 19 principles on financial benchmarks outlined in July last year by the International Organization of Securities Commissions, an umbrella group of market regulators.

ICAP had voluntarily adopted the umbrella group’s principles for financial benchmarks in July, said Kevin Taylor, the managing director of ICAP Information Services, adding that it would continue to build its business on those principles.

“Our joint solution for the administration of the London gold fixing will be rooted in transparent methodology and data processes, while making use of our market-leading industry expertise,” Taylor said yesterday.

The bullion market association will hold a seminar this month for short-listed proposals.

In a shift driven by the increased regulatory scrutiny after scandals over manipulation of benchmark prices in other financial markets, a similar process to find a new administrator took place in the silver market this year.

That search yielded an electronic auction mechanism run by the Chicago Mercantile Exchange and Thomson Reuters.

This exchange was the first to confirm its interest in bidding to operate the gold process in July.

The London Metal Exchange, data provider Platts, part of McGraw Hill Group, and bullion broker Autilla also said they were in talks with the bullion market but declined to comment on whether they had submitted a formal proposal.

A third source said that US derivatives bourse Intercontinental Exchange was likely to have put in a proposal. The exchange declined to comment.

These groups had all bid to replace the 117-year-old silver benchmark, alongside US news agency Bloomberg and UK-based exchange-traded funds provider ETF Securities. – Reuters

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