Tuesday, 30 July 2013
Gold Premiums in India Double as Supplies Decline on Curbs
Gold premiums in India, the world’s largest user last
year, doubled in the past week as jewelers rushed to
secure supplies after a surge in imports this month
spurred the central bank to impose fresh curbs on
purchases.
The fees paid by jewelers to banks and other
importers climbed to about $10 an ounce over the
London cash price from as low as $4 an ounce a week
earlier, said Haresh Soni, chairman of the All India
Gems & Jewellery Trade Federation. The Reserve Bank
of India on July 22 made it mandatory for gold
importers to set aside 20 percent for re-exports as
jewelry.
“There will definitely be raw material shortage during
the festival season,” Soni said in a phone interview
from New Delhi today. “The international market is
not that favorable right now and exports can’t
increase just like that. We need relaxation on this for
the survival of the industry as millions of artisans will
be without jobs.”
Slideshow: The Real Cost of Owning Gold
India’s rupee slumped to a record this month on
concern that the current-account deficit will widen
from a record in the year ended March as bullion
imports surged. The government has doubled a tax
on inbound shipments to 8 percent this year and
curbed financing to tackle a surge in demand after
bullion entered a bear market in April. New curbs
were announced after imports rose in July, Finance
Minister Palaniappan Chidambaram said today, while
appealing to people to moderate demand.
Festival Demand
Imports in June shrank to about 38 metric tons from
162 tons in May, according to the jewelry federation.
Inbound shipments may tumble 63 percent to 175
tons in the six months through December from a year
earlier after imports were linked to re-exports,
according to Bachhraj Bamalwa, a director at the
jewelry federation. The shortage in the local market
may increase the premium paid by jewelers to about
$25 an ounce by the Diwali festival in November, said
Dharmesh Bhatia, deputy vice president for research
at Kotak Commodities Services Ltd.
“Imports will definitely fall,” Bhatia said by phone
from Mumbai. “Availability of gold has already fallen
and higher premium means the end consumer has to
pay more. Jewelry prices will increase.”
Buying and gifting gold ornaments in India is
considered auspicious during festivals and weddings.
The festival season runs from August to November
followed by the wedding season through early May. A
good agriculture harvest and lower prices may
underpin Indian gold demand later this year,
according to Societe Generale SA.
Investment Demand
Spot gold gained 0.4 percent to $1,338.23 an ounce
at 4:37 p.m. in Mumbai, paring losses to 20 percent
this year. Gold for delivery in August jumped 1.2
percent to 27,975 ($471) rupees on the Multi
Commodity Exchange of India Ltd. (MCX)
“With the rise in customs duty and increased
premium, investment demand would take a hit in the
medium term,” CARE Research, a unit of Credit
Analysis & Research Ltd. (CARE), said in an e-mailed
report today. “Government is also expected to put
more restrictions on purchase of gold coins and bars.”
Demand for gold coins and bars as investment was
345 tons in the year ended March, or 37 percent of
the total demand of 918 tons, it said.
Consumption in India, which imports almost all the
bullion it uses, accounted for 20 percent of global
demand in 2012, according to data from the World
Gold Council.
The new central bank rules on imports may allow
companies with more than 20 percent of exposure to
exports to source gold easily compared with jewelers
with more domestic sales, CARE said. Some jewelers
might have to subsidize their exports to attain the
80:20 ratio, it said.
The current-account deficit, the broadest measure of
trade tracking goods, services and investment
income, widened to $87.8 billion in the year ended
March 31 from $78.2 billion in 2011-2012, according
to official data. The deficit is the biggest risk to the
$1.9 trillion economy, according to the central bank.
The rupee, which touched a record low of 61.2125 per
dollar on July 8, fell 0.6 percent to 59.38 today.
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