London: ICBC Standard Bank Plc expanded its push into London’s precious metals market by agreeing to buy one of Europe’s largest vaults from Barclays Plc.

ICBC Standard, formed last year after Industrial and Commercial Bank of China Ltd — China’s biggest bank — bought a controlling stake in Standard Bank Plc’s global markets business, expects the purchase of the vaulting business and related contracts to be completed in July, it said in an emailed statement Monday. No financial details were given.

About $5 trillion (Dh18.3 trillion) of transactions are cleared every year in London’s gold market, which Barclays is exiting as it pulls out of precious metals. ICBC Standard last week joined the city’s precious-metals clearing system and last month won classification as a market maker by the London Bullion Market Association.

“This enables us to better execute on our strategy to become one of the largest Chinese banks in the precious metals market,” Mark Buncombe, head of commodities at ICBC Standard Bank, said in the statement. “The acquisition of a precious metals vault allows us to expand our services in clearing and processing.”

Market changes

There are changes coming to London’s precious metals market, where the over-the-counter system of trading has been largely unchanged for centuries. The LBMA has asked companies to bid to create a new trading and reporting platform, while the World Gold Council is said to be in exploratory talks with the London Metal Exchange and a group of banks to offer futures contracts. Those banks include ICBC, people with knowledge of the matter said earlier this year.

The vault, which can store 2,000 tonnes of gold and other precious metals such as silver, platinum, palladium, was opened by Barclays in 2012 and took more than a year to build. The location of the vault is secret, but the lender has said it’s within the M25 road that orbits London. Its decision to exit the business comes as US and European Union regulators investigate whether at least 10 banks — including Barclays, JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Deutsche Bank AG — manipulated prices of precious metals such as silver and gold.

Barclays Chief Executive Officer Jes Staley said in January that the bank was assessing “various options” to exit its precious metals business while vowing to speed up disposals from the bank’s non-core unit, which houses £51 billion (Dh270.3 billion, $73 billion) of toxic and otherwise unwanted assets.

Shares in the British bank fell 1.3 per cent to 163.2 pence at 12:26pm in London, extending the decline this year to about 25 per cent.

HSBC Holdings Plc and JPMorgan Chase & Co. are among others operating gold vaults in London.