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LONDON: A group of banks, financial firms and blue-chip companies has drawn up trading guidelines designed to boost activity in the auctions that set gold and silver benchmark prices used around the world and make them more reliable.

The benchmarks are intended to be a fair and accurate snapshot of the fast-moving spot market. But they sometimes diverge from the spot price, leaving buyers and sellers with unexpected gains or losses. On Oct. 29, for example, the afternoon gold benchmark was set at $1,769.15, $1.95 below the lowest level reached on the spot market that day, data from Refinitiv Eikon shows — costing sellers money and gifting buyers a bargain.

Jewellers, miners, traders and manufacturers across the globe buy and sell gold worth hundreds of millions of dollars each day at the benchmark auctions. The benchmark prices are also embedded in supply contracts across the industry. Large divergences have become rare but are caused in part by a more recent unwillingness among banks who feed client orders into the auctions to add or remove buy or sell orders to ensure the auctions stay close to prices in the spot market.

After scandals over the fixing of benchmarks such as LIBOR, many feared regulators could see it as price manipulation.

The Fixed Income, Currencies and Commodities Markets Standards Board (FMSB) - a group of large banks, asset managers and other companies that says it aims make markets more transparent, fair and effective - has drafted a “standard” explaining when it is appropriate for banks to change orders during the auctions.

It says: “This Standard is designed to provide some clarity ... so as to increase the volume of bids and offers submitted to LBMA (benchmark) Auctions and improve the quality of price discovery resulting from them.”

The FMSB, which has no regulatory authority, said it aimed to publish the final standard in December.

The gold and silver benchmarks suffered numerous large divergences around 2016 and 2017, when as few as ten firms — nine of them banks — participated in the gold auctions and seven — all banks — took part in the silver auctions.

Eighteen participants now funnel orders to the gold auctions, eight of which are not banks but other trading companies. Fifteen firms take part in the silver auctions, eight of which are not banks.

The gold and silver benchmarks are operated by ICE Benchmark Administration (IBA), a unit of Intercontinental Exchange (ICE) , on behalf of the London Bullion Market Association (LBMA), a trade association.

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