Gold in India shifts to discount, while China buying picks up

Reuters  |  MUMBAI/BENGALURU 

By Rajendra and Layek

Meanwhile Chinese buying picked up on the back of a firm yuan and trade tensions with the

"Jewellers bought gold in the last few weeks for exhibition. They have enough inventory," said Ashok Jain, of Mumbai-based

A five-day International Jewellery Show kicked off earlier this week in

Dealers in were offering a discount of up to $1.50 an ounce over official domestic prices this week, compared with a premium of $1.50 last week.

"As prices corrected, jewellers started buying in the last few weeks. They are now looking for a bigger correction before making purchases," said Mukesh Kothari, at RiddiSiddhi Bullions in

In the Indian market, gold futures were trading around 29,641 rupees per 10 grams on Friday, after falling to 29,422 rupees earlier last week, their lowest since Jan. 11.

Premiums in top consumer ranged between $2 and $3 an ounce this week, versus $1-$3 last week, while premiums in were around 70 cents to $1.30 as against $1-$1.40 previously.

"There was some good buying in as the currency strengthened and due to uncertainty over the trade war between U.S. and China," said Ronald Leung, at Lee Cheong Gold Dealers in Hong Kong.

The Chinese yuan hit a one-week high against the dollar earlier this week. A weaker dollar makes dollar-priced gold cheaper for non-U.S investors.

In the latest development in the ongoing trade spat between the two major economies, the Trade Representative's office said it would begin collecting 25 percent tariffs on another $16 billion in Chinese goods on Aug. 23.

In Singapore, premiums remained unchanged at 80 cents.

"This week has been short because of the (holiday)... so physical demand wasn't as good as we have seen a few weeks back when gold prices came down," said Brian Lan, managing at GoldSilver Central in

"When gold prices come close to about $1,200 or a bit lower, we might see more buying."

Benchmark spot gold was on track for a fifth straight weekly decline, hovering near a 17-month low at about $1,210 an ounce

Demand remained quiet this week in due to an upcoming national holiday, Obon, keeping premiums unchanged at 50 cents, a said.

(Reporting by and Layek in Bengaluru and Rajendra in Mumbai; Editing by Jan Harvey)

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

First Published: Fri, August 10 2018. 18:20 IST