Gold imports by India, which competes with China for the role of world’s biggest consumer, are said to have risen almost three-fold in February from a year earlier as jewelers increased stockpiles before the festival and wedding period that starts next month.
Shipments jumped 175 per cent to 96.4 metric tons in February from a year earlier, according to a person familiar with provisional data from the finance ministry, who asked not to be identified as the data aren’t public. Overseas purchases slid 32 per cent to 595.5 tonnes in the 11 months to February. Ministry spokesperson DS Malik declined to comment on the data.
After a lull in demand exacerbated by Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s move to withdraw high denomination currency notes, jewelers are building up inventories. They expect to see some recovery in purchases ahead of India’s wedding season and on the auspicious Hindu gold-buying day of Akshaya Tritiya that falls toward the end of April this year.
“We expect some heavy buying in April as a large number of weddings are expected to take place,” Mehul Choksi, chairperson of jewelry store chain Gitanjali Gems, said by phone from Mumbai. “The wedding season runs from April to July, so we are expecting some recovery in demand.”
While annual Indian demand recovers, year-on-year growth rates will be modest, relative to historical levels, Citigroup said in research report on Wednesday. Demand is estimated around 725 tonnes in 2017, similar to levels seen the prior year, it said. Indians buy gold during festivals and for marriages as part of the bridal trousseau or as gifts, and the nation imports almost all the gold it consumes.
Gold prices in London fell for the third straight day declining as much as 0.4 per cent to US$1211.51 an ounce, the lowest level in more than a month. —bloomberg/GB