Gold price rally, cash crunch dulls Akshaya Tritiya festival buying

Reuters  |  MUMBAI/BENGALURU 

By and Eileen Soreng

On Wednesday, Indians celebrated the annual festival of Akshaya Tritiya, when buying is considered auspicious.

"Consumers want to make purchases for Akshaya Tritiya, but they are not comfortable with the current price. They are making smaller purchases," said Chanda Venkatesh, of CapsGold, a bullion merchant based in the southern city of

In the local market, prices were nearly 10 percent higher during the current festival period compared with last year, with prices trading around 31,573 rupees per 10 grams, the highest level since August 2016.

This is also the highest price levels seen on record for the month of April compared with the previous corresponding periods.

Usually the market trades in a on Akshay Trititya day, but a with a global trading firm said it was surprising to see it either at a discount or at par.

Dealers in were offering a discount of up to $1 an ounce on official domestic prices this week, down from $2 last week. The domestic price includes a 10 percent import tax.

A cash-crunch was also hurting in many parts of the country, said Nitin Khandelwal, at All Gems & Jewellery Trade Federation (GJF).

In the last few weeks, banks' automated machines (ATMs) had run out of notes in different parts of the country.

Bankers and operators of automated machines say the sudden shortage of cash in some Indian states is mainly the result of the central fewer 2,000 rupee notes over the past few months in favour of harder-to-hoard smaller bills.

Meanwhile, demand across major centres in remained sluggish as benchmark prices hovered close to a two-and-half month high.

Spot was 0.4 percent higher at $1,352.22 an ounce at 1250 GMT on Wednesday, having hit an 11-week high at $1,365.23 last week.

Premiums charged in top consumer were about $5 to $7 an ounce, little changed from last week.

"The demand is not too much ... and will slow down from here," Peter Fung, of dealing at Wing Fung in Hong Kong said, adding that some buying interest could come in around the $1,310-$1,320 level.

Hong Kong premiums edged up to 50 cents to $1.20 this week, versus the 50-60 cent range last week.

Premiums in were also little changed from last week and ranged between 70 cents to a dollar.

Demand across South-east has been slow, a said.

For the third straight week, was being sold at par with the global benchmark in

($1 = 65.6600 Indian rupees)

(Reporting by in and in Bengaluru, additional reporting by Apeksha Nair; editing by David Evans)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Wed, April 18 2018. 19:21 IST