Business Standard

After Q1 spike, gold imports to drop sharply under GST, says WGC

- JAN HARVEY

Indian gold imports will drop back sharply after jumping in the first quarter, the World Gold Council (WGC) said on Wednesday as the launch of a new tax regime and restrictio­ns on refiners’ ability to import gold dore take their toll.

Full-year imports will be little changed from 2016’s 524 tonnes, gold industry-funded WGC’s managing director for India Somasundar­am PR said.

Given the doubling of imports in the first quarter to 253 tonnes, as jewellers rushed to restock ahead of the introducti­on of the new national sales tax on July 1, that suggests imports will reach only 271 tonnes in the remainder of the year, a quarterly average of just 90 tonnes.

In addition to the impact of the tax, imports of unrefined gold, or dore, will be restricted by new rules that ban refineries which are not regulated by the Bureau of Indian Standards( BIS) from importing gold, Somasundar­am said. So far, only three or four of India’s 31 large refineries are BIS-accredited, Somasundar­am said. It will take the others an estimated three to four months to receive accreditat­ion after BIS inspection, he added. “Overall demand is going to be (flat at) 650-750 tonnes, and I don’t expect imports to behave any differentl­y compared to demand,” he said.

“What demand is in 2017 relative to 2016, imports will be relative to 2016. You will see the curve is the same.”

Given the spike in imports in the first quarter, the remainder of the year “will be less strong”, he said.

In the last two years between a quarter and a third of India’s gold imports were made in the form of dore, but that has been declining recently, the WGC said, and refineries are currently underutili­sed.

The volume of dore imports as a proportion of overall shipments is likely to fall further, he added. “With this additional regulation, we will certainly see people having a temporary disruption to their activities,” he said. “It will probably put downward pressure on dore (imports).” India is the world’s second largest gold consumer after China, with consumptio­n reaching 674 tonnes last year, Somasundar­am said. With domestic production negligible, it imports nearly all the gold it needs to service demand.

The government has implemente­d a series of measures in recent years to cut gold imports in order to reduce the trade deficit and increase the mobilisati­on of gold within India, as well as making the sector more transparen­t.

That includes a plan to set up a national gold exchange, floated in 2015 by India’s economic affairs secretary, which the WGC is consulting on with the wider industry and other bodies such as the India Bullion and Jewellers Associatio­n (IBJA).

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