China Daily

Gold shines as wealth boosts jewelry

- By ZHENG XIN zhengxin@chinadaily.com.cn

Rising affluence is continuing to stoke jewelry demand, resulting in rising consumptio­n of gold in China, secondquar­ter industry data confirmed.

According to David Harquail, chairman of the World Gold Council, robust gold consumptio­n in China will likely grow further as long as the country’s wealth keeps expanding.

Harquail estimated that Chinese people will buy about 30 percent of the gold sold globally, mostly in the form of jewelry.

Agreed Song Xin, president of the China Gold Associatio­n. He attributed the continuous increase in gold jewelry consumptio­n to growing demand among younger Chinese consumers for gold earrings, bracelets and other kinds of jewelry.

Globally, gold demand during the first half of 2018 dropped 6 percent year-onyear to 1,959.90 metric tons, the lowest level since 2009, the WGC said in its latest report on demand trends.

In the second quarter alone, demand was down 4 percent year-on-year to 964.3 tons. Purchases for investment purpose fell 9 percent, the WGC said.

But, during the same period, the yellow metal’s consumptio­n in China rose 7 percent year-on-year to reach 332 tons, a three-year record.

Analysts said consumptio­n is expected to continue to rise on the back of strong demand and growth in high-end sectors like jewelry.

China has for long been the dominant player in the global gold industry. “The industry is moving to produce more retail products to meet customer needs,” said Zhu Yi, senior analyst of metals and mining at Bloomberg Intelligen­ce.

“The rise in second-quarter demand was mostly driven by consumptio­n of jewelry, gold bars, coins, and the growth rate is faster than that in the first quarter because of investor concerns amid (China-US) trade tensions.”

The global slump in gold prices since April has further stimulated the already strong demand in China, said Zhu. “The price drop due to the China-US trade tensions, the growing strength of the US dollar, and the depreciati­on of the RMB will further drive gold demand in the second half.”

Internatio­nal gold prices, which were at $1,302.70 per ounce at the beginning of this year, dropped toward the end of April and closed the first half at $1,253.20 per ounce.

However, domestic gold consumptio­n during the first half reached 541.22 tons, a slight increase compared with the same period last year, CGA data showed.

The CGA said gold consumptio­n in China reached 1,089.07 tons in 2017, up 9.41 percent, with demand for gold jewelry, gold bars and industrial-use yellow metal surging.

The jewelry segment’s consumptio­n was up by 6.37 percent year-on-year to 351.84 tons, it said.

The rise in secondquar­ter demand was mostly driven by consumptio­n of jewelry, gold bars, coins ...”

Zhu Yi, senior analyst of metals and mining at Bloomberg Intelligen­ce

 ?? WANG JIANZHONG / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Consumers browse gold ornaments at a jewelry store in Suzhou, Jiangsu province.
WANG JIANZHONG / FOR CHINA DAILY Consumers browse gold ornaments at a jewelry store in Suzhou, Jiangsu province.

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