Thursday, 31 October 2013

Gold Demand In Indian Festival Season Seen Lower On Import Curbs

31-Oct-2013


Gold purchases in India, the biggest consumer, will probably be less in the festival season this year as import curbs reduce supplies and demand cools after surging in April when prices slumped into bear market.



Sales of coins and bars may decline to as little as 25 percent of purchases a year earlier, according to the All India Gems & Jewellery Trade Federation. Buying and gifting gold in the country is considered auspicious and the most favorable time is today, the festival of Dhanteras, two days before Diwali.



Gold is heading for its first annual decline in 13 years as some investors lost faith in bullion as a store of value and the U.S. Federal Reserve indicated that it will reduce monetary stimulus. The precious metal rose 70 percent from December 2008 to June 2011 as the Fed pumped more than $2 trillion into the financial system to boost the economy. Consumption in India, which imports almost all the bullion it uses, accounted for 20 percent of global demand in 2012, the World Gold Council says.

STORY: Stan Lee's New Superhero Fights for Truth, Justice, and the Indian Way



“Jewelers say that demand for coins and bars this season could be only 25 percent of what they saw in the festival season last year and jewelry demand will be moderate.” said Haresh Soni, chairman of the federation which represents about 300,000 jewelers, bullion dealers and brokers. “Jewelers are quite alert that if they sell coins, they will not get raw material to make jewelry,” he said on Oct. 30.

Import Curbs



Buying from October to December was 261.9 tons last year, with coins and bars making up about 40 percent of the total, according to the World Gold Council. Imports slumped after the government linked shipments to re-exports in July and increased taxes on overseas purchases. Prime Minister Manmohan Singh tightened the curbs after rising demand helped to widen the nation’s current-account deficit and pushed down the rupee.



“Demand is a little bit lesser this year as the wedding season was much longer last year,” said Mehul Choksi, chairman of Gitanjali Gems Ltd. (GITG), from Mumbai. “A lot of purchases were advanced earlier because of the price fall in April.”

STORY: Chinese Still Prefer Property Over Stocks



Gold for immediate delivery in London slumped 21 percent this year to $1,324.31 an ounce and reached $1,180.50 on June 28. Futures on the Multi Commodity Exchange of India Ltd. (MCX) dropped 1.2 percent to 29,793 rupees ($484) per 10 grams yesterday, 15 percent below the record 35,074 rupees on Aug. 28.



Purchases of gold and silver fell to $800 million in September from $4.6 billion a year earlier, said the Commerce Ministry. The government plans to keep imports to 800 tons in the financial year ending March 31 from 845 tons a year earlier, Economic Affairs Secretary Arvind Mayaram said Oct. 1.



Lower supply boosted premiums to a record in India, said Soni. The fees that jewelers pay to buy gold from banks and bullion dealers were $120 an ounce higher than the London cash price now compared with a discount of $60 in September, he said.


Source:- businessweek.com





No comments:

Post a Comment