Gulf News

Global gold sales lose shine

IN THE UAE, SHOPPERS CONTINUE TO HOLD BACK FROM JEWELLERY BUYING SPREES GIVEN VAT ON RETAIL PRICING

- DUBAI BY MANOJ NAIR Associate Editor

At 1,959.9 tonnes, worldwide demand for gold has slipped to its weakest firsthalf performanc­e since 2009, with the dip jewellery sales in India and the Middle East being one of the reasons. In the first half of 2009, global demand for the metal was estimated at 1,853.2 tonnes. |

At 1,959.9 tonnes, worldwide demand for gold has slipped to its weakest firsthalf performanc­e since 2009, with the dip jewellery sales in India and the Middle East being one of the reasons. In the first half of 2009, global demand for the metal was estimated at 1,853.2 tonnes.

In the UAE specifical­ly, gold and jewellery sales in the first six months weighed in with 18.9 tonnes, but down from the 25.3 tonnes recorded same time last year, according to the latest World Gold Council numbers.

What the first-half 2018 numbers reveal is that UAE consumers are still adjusting to the value-added tax (VAT) factor on gold retail pricing.

“There was also their sentiments on the economy, plus there was the subdued tourist buying for much of this period,” said John Mulligan, Head of Member and Market Relations at the London-based WGC.

“For [the trade in] Dubai, there is the added challenge of gold buying happening elsewhere in the region.” (At yesterday’s opening, 22k gold was quoted at Dh138.75 in Dubai.) Even the pick-up in buying last month — after gold prices dropped to a one-year low — has been more or less subdued, local market sources say.

“The increase is very marginal and not something that we can talk about [as a fullscale recovery in buying habits],” said Anil Dhanak, Managing Director at Kanz Jewels. The retailer said it will continue to focus on the big-ticket purchases — of the Dh15,000 and over kind — to see through the soft period.

Meanwhile, Saudi Arabia saw 18 tonnes of gold and jewellery changing hands in first-half 2018, but is seeing the impact from the transition to full-scale localisati­on of staff at jewellery stores, Mulligan said. Iran saw a bit of activity, accounting for 17.3 tonnes, with shoppers putting faith in the metal for its safe haven status.

But Indian consumers kept their distance compared to recent years, taking in only 267.1 tonnes against the 284.7 tonnes in first-half 2017.

“With the dollar’s strength, gold demand certainly felt the impact of higher local currency prices,” said Mulligan.

“To some extent, it was the case in India and even in Turkey.”

To compensate for the dips in India and the Middle East, Chinese buyers did their bit, taking in 359.9 tonnes and quite a bit of gain on the 337.2 tonnes of jewellery they amassed in the first half of 2017.

China market looking up

According to Mulligan, China’s jewellery retailers seem to be overcoming the challenges — including shifts in generation­al preference­s — the sector had been facing during 2016-17.

The US consumer also pulled his or her weight, with jewellery demand up 5 per cent. In fact, the growth in the economy and the general feel-good factor around it had the second quarter 2018 demand in the US hitting a 10-year high.

But on the downside, it was institutio­nal investors and bullion funds in the US who were keeping away from bullion during this period and led to the overall decline in global H1-18 offtake.

“Holdings of North American-listed [exchange traded] funds fell by 30.6 tonnes as investors focused on domestic economic strength,” the WGC report notes. Overall ETF “inflows were down 46 per cent year-on-year.” (But European funds did manage to soften some of the demand dip, picking up bullion exposure “due to uncertaint­y stemming from Italian elections and monetary policy outlook”.

For gold buyers, whether individual or institutio­nal, the coming weeks will be fixated on how the dollar continues to fare and whether trade-related tensions play havoc on emerging market currencies.

Alistair Hewitt, Head of Market Intelligen­ce at the World Gold Council, said in a statement, ““It’s interestin­g how investors around the world have reacted to some of the risks stalking financial markets. Weaker economic prospects and tumbling currencies off the back of heightened tensions with the US boosted Chinese and Iranian gold demand, while US investors shrugged off any geopolitic­al concerns.”

 ?? Ahmed Ramzan/Gulf News Archive ?? Customers at a jewellery store in Dubai. How the dollar fares and the effect of trade-related tensions on emerging market currencies will be topmost on gold buyers’ minds in weeks ahead.
Ahmed Ramzan/Gulf News Archive Customers at a jewellery store in Dubai. How the dollar fares and the effect of trade-related tensions on emerging market currencies will be topmost on gold buyers’ minds in weeks ahead.
 ?? Virendra Saklani/Gulf News ?? Anil Dhanak
Virendra Saklani/Gulf News Anil Dhanak
 ?? VisMedia ?? James Murray
VisMedia James Murray

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