Investors are closer to being able to use gold as a trading security after a European parliamentary committee approved a proposal to allow clearinghouses to accept gold as collateral, the World Gold Council said.
The European Parliament's Committee on Economic and Monetary Affairs Tuesday agreed unanimously to allow clearinghouses to accept gold. The proposal, under the under the European Market Infrastructure Regulation, will be passed to the European Parliament and the Council of the European Union for another round of voting in July.
The credit quality of traditional collateral assets, such as European government bonds have continued to see a deterioration.

At the same time, many traditional collateral assets, such as European government bonds, have continued to see deterioration in credit quality as a result of the sovereign-debt crisis.
In October 2009, CME Group Inc. said it would allow physical gold to be used as collateral for margin requirements, a move that was followed by rival Intercontinental Exchange Inc. in late 2010.
In February this year, JP Morgan Chase & Co. announced its decision to accept physical gold as collateral in some financial transactions.
"It is very significant that the European Parliament is putting its weight behind the argument that the unique characteristics of gold make it an ideal form of high quality liquid collateral," said Natalie Dempster, director of government affairs at the WGC.