Business Standard

More gold import curbs on star houses to check round-tripping

- RAJESH BHAYANI

In a move aimed at curing round-tripping, the Directorat­e General of Foreign Trade (DGFT) on Wednesday further tightened the norms for import of gold by four-star and fivestar export houses with a Nominated Agency Certificat­e (NAC) and doing big business in the yellow metal.

Through Notificati­on 34, issued on October 18 amending the rules, DGFT effectivel­y barred these export houses from importing for domestic consumptio­n. “Henceforth, no nominated agency certificat­e shall be issued/renewed for four-star export house and five-star export house status holders. Import of gold by four-star and five-star houses with existing nominated agency certificat­e will be subject to actual user condition. They will be permitted to import gold as input only for the purpose of manufactur­e and export by themselves during the remaining validity period of the nominated agency certificat­e,” DGFT explained.

Through yet another public notice, DGFT withdrew the Power of Regional Authoritie­s of DGFT to issue/renew Nominated Agency Certificat­es. Industry sources explained that some export houses were inflating the amount of exports for which they were exporting gold, virtually without value addition, and retaining their export house status. This was helping them import gold and sell 25 per cent of that in the domestic market and earn a premium, as well as a marginal profit that banks importing gold for domestic markets would otherwise earn.

Now, only those export houses will be permitted to import gold which are bringing them as input for the manufactur­e and export by themselves during the remaining validity of their Nominated Agency certificat­e.

A veteran of the gold export business said when the government restricted gold imports in 2013, putting an 80:20 condition mandating importers to use or sell 20 per cent of the total gold imports for the purpose of export. The actual user condition at the time was imposed for the import of gold by star export houses. That was withdrawn later and a window to import gold without actual user condition remained open.

Star export houses imported gold by producing bank guarantees for reexportin­g within a stipulated time without paying any duty. However, they were allegedly not following the value-addition norms for re-export. Besides, they sold imported gold in the domestic market at a premium, using that money without any interest as a cheaper substitute for bank finance. Before the normal permissibl­e period for reexport, they bought back gold and re-exported 23-24 carat jewellery or medallions. Last August, the government had banned the export of jewellery and medallions of more than 22 carat which disincenti­vised exports, especially low-value-addition export, known also as round-tripping.

The scale of round-tripping is estimated at between 120-130 tonnes every year. But, Wednesday's decision of not renewing nominated agency certificat­es and restrictin­g gold imports by four- and five-star export houses on actual user condition would further disincenti­vise round-tripping, according to the bullion industry veteran quoted earlier

 ??  ?? Import by 4-star and 5-star export houses to be subject to actual user condition
Import by 4-star and 5-star export houses to be subject to actual user condition

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