Weaker gold prices fail to revive demand in Asia; Indian premiums widen

Reuters  |  MUMBAI/BENGALURU 

By Rajendra and Apeksha Nair

In India, gold futures were trading at around 31,011 rupees per 10 grams, after rising to their highest since August 2016 at 31,620 rupees last month.

"Demand has been improving. are making purchases for weddings," said Harshad Ajmera, the of JJ Gold House, a in the eastern Indian city of

Dealers were charging a premium of up to $1.5 an ounce over official domestic prices this week, compared with a premium of $1 last week. The domestic price includes a 10 percent import tax.

"Jewellers are comfortable making purchases around $1,300. They are making purchases as their inventory has already been depleted due to thin buying in last few weeks," said a Mumbai-based with a private bullion importing

In the March quarter, Indian gold demand fell 12 percent from a year earlier to 115.6 tonnes, as jewellery demand dropped to the second-lowest level in 10 years, the said on Thursday.

But demand may improve through the year as positive monsoon rains and government efforts to raise incomes could boost rural purchases enough to offset higher prices because of the weak rupee.

Meanwhile, benchmark spot gold prices eased on Friday, weighed down by a firmer dollar ahead of U.S. jobs data, and were headed for a third consecutive weekly decline.

"The movement in gold is not too much. People seem to be waiting around these levels," said Ronald Leung, at Lee Cheong Gold Dealers in Hong Kong.

In China, premiums ranged $8-$9 this week, unchanged from last week.

The public holiday period earlier this week saw a pick-up in jewellery sales, though overall investment demand remained quiet in the world's top consumer.

"China's 65 percent of annual consumption comes from the jewellery sector. Based on our reviews, jewellery sales during the public holiday (April 29- May 1) was quite well due to seasonality, but sales plummeted after the holiday," said Samson Li, an with GFMS.

Premiums charged in Hong Kong were also unchanged from last week, at 50 cents to $1.50.

In Singapore, premiums were marginally higher at about 80 cents this week, compared with 60 cents-70 cents last week.

Physical demand, at least in Southeast Asia, was good this week because of lower prices, said Brian Lan, at GoldSilver Central in

Gold continued to be sold at par with the global benchmark for the fifth consecutive week in

($1 = 66.7875 Indian rupees)

(Reporting by Rajendra in Mumbai, and Eileen Soreng in Bengaluru)

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

First Published: Fri, May 04 2018. 16:19 IST