Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-gbm5v Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-22T22:08:50.105Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Hong Kong Gold Market and the Southeast Asian Gold Trade in the 1950s

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 November 2008

Catherine R. Schenk
Affiliation:
Royal Holloway & Bedford New College

Abstract

In the 1950s Hong Kong was the centre of the Southeast Asian gold trade due to its traditional facilities as an entrepot. In the postwar period, however, this trade took place illegally, which distorted the direction of the trade. This article surveys the British attitude to the gold market in the immediate postwar period, using archival records from the British Treasury and the Bank of England. The changing pattern of the gold trade between the major centres of Hong Kong, Singapore and Thailand is then described. The gold market offers an almost unique view of the pattern of smuggling trade in the region due to detailed reports in the local press and investigations at the time by the Bank of England.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1995

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1 The term native distinguishes these banks from the many branches of overseas banks operating in Hong Kong which were prohibited from participating in the free markets.

2 1.000 fine gold = 24 carat gold.

3 Public Records Office, London, Treasury Files (hereafter PRO, T) T236/2033, Telegram from Grantham to Secretary of State for the Colonies, 9 June 1948.

4 PRO, T236/2034, Telegram from Secretary of State for the Colonies to Grantham, 6 November. 1948.

5 PRO, T236/2034, Telegram from Grantham to Secretary of State for the Colonies, 22 April 1949.

6 PRO, T236/2034, Telegram from Grantham to Secretary of State for the Colonies, 24 May 1949.

7 PRO, T236/2034, Letter to N. E. Young from Portsmore at Bank of England, 24 May 1949.

8 PRO, T236/2034, Telegram from Secretary of State for the Colonies to Grantham, 27 May 1949.

9 Bank of England Archives (hereafter BE), OV14/4, Report of FJ Portsmore's visit to Hong Kong, 27 June 1949.Google Scholar

11 BE, OV14/4, Hogg, P. L., Personal Report, 11 May 1953.Google Scholar

12 The Gold and Silver Exchange of Hongkong’, by ‘a Chinese Bullion Dealer’, Far Eastern Economic Review, 26 07 1951, pp. 123–4.Google Scholar

14 The Gold and Silver Exchange of Hongkong’ By a Chinese Banker, Far Eastern Economic Review, 24 07 1954, pp. 802–3.Google Scholar

15 Ibid. One Tael = 1.2033 Troy oz.

16 Macao Gold Trade’, Far Eastern Economic Review, 3 04 1952, p. 466.Google Scholar

18 Macao Gold Trade‘,Far Eastern Economic Review, 3 04 1952, p. 466.Google Scholar

19 Far Eastern Economic Review, 17 June 1954, p. 769.Google Scholar

20 Far Eastern Economic Review, 28 February 1952, p. 292.Google Scholar

22 Annual Departmental Reports, Director of Commerce and Industry, 1957/8, Hong Kong, p. 38.Google Scholar

23 Annual Departmental Reports, Director of Commerce and Industry, 1956/7, p. 30.Google Scholar

24 BE, OV14/9, Hogg, P. L., Personal Report, 11 May 1953.Google Scholar

26 A Proposed Philippine Gold Bullion Exchange’, Far Eastern Economic Review, 11 09. 1952, pp. 349–51.Google Scholar

29 Gold Trading in Thailand‘, Far Eastern Economic Review, 2 10. 1952, p. 450.Google Scholar

30 BE, OV 25/11, Note by Byatt, A. J., 14 October. 1952.Google Scholar

31 BE, OV25/11, Hogg, P. L., ‘Thailand: Gold’, 24 January. 1955.Google Scholar

34 BE, OV14/9, P. L. Hogg's Personal Report on a visit to Hong Kong, 11 May 1953.Google Scholar

35 BE, OV14/9, Hogg's, P. L. Personal Report on a visit to Hong Kong, 11 May 1953.Google Scholar

38 This account is detailed in Far Eastern Economic Review, 13 May 1954, p. 611.Google Scholar

39 Gold Trading in Thailand‘, Far Eastern Economic Review, 2 10. 1952. p. 449.Google Scholar

40 BE, OV14/9, Letter from J. M. Stevens of B.E. to Crick at UK Treasury and Supply Delegation in Washington, 3 Nov. 1953.Google Scholar

42 Far Eastern Economic Review, 13 May 1954, P. 611.Google Scholar

43 Green, T., The New World of Gold (London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1985), p. 160.Google Scholar

44 Jao, Y. C., ‘Hong Kong as a Regional Financial Centre: Evolution and Prospects’, in Leung, C. et al. (eds), Hong Kong: Dilemmas of Growth (Canberra: Research School of Pacific Studies, Australia National University, 1980), p. 172.Google Scholar