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Why India’s Appetite for Gold Is Something to Worry About

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Why India’s Appetite for Gold Is Something to Worry About
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As India grapples with rapidly slowing growth, a depreciating currency and policy inaction from a weak government, the country’s huge appetite for gold is putting the economy in a precarious position.

Surging gold prices last year failed to dent India’s demand for the precious metal. The country imported a record 969 tons in 2011, putting enormous pressure on its already ballooning trade and current account deficits.

“One of the primary drivers of the current account deficit has been the growth of almost 50 percent in imports of gold and other precious metals in the first three quarters of this year (2011-2012)," India’s finance minister Pranab Mukherjee said earlier this month.

The government has responded by doubling the import duty on gold, sparking a three-day strike by jewelers and gold dealers across the country.

India is the top importer of gold in the world and imported $58 billion worth of gold in the fiscal year ending March 31 2012, up from $38 billion in the previous fiscal, according to government estimates.

Prabhat Awasthi, Head of Equities for India at Nomura, says that oil imports are already a huge burden on India’s current account and the country cannot afford additional pressure from gold and silver.

Together oil and gold imports make up an estimated 70 percent of the country’s trade deficit.

India’s current account deficit is expected to be above $65 billion for the 2011-2012 fiscal year, while the trade deficit is expected to be around $175 billion, according to government forecasts.

This is worrying investors as the weakening rupee makes it more expensive for India to pay for its imports.

In a report published earlier this week, Morgan Stanley analysts wrote that gold has been a big source of stress on the current account deficit over the past two years.

The bank said India’s household gold consumption has gone up from $19 billion in 2009 to $45 billion in 2011.

According to Morgan Stanley, if you remove gold, India’s current account deficit would fall to just $12 billion and the current account deficit to GDP ratio would drop to less than 0.6 percent.

However, some economists argue that gold’s contribution to the current account deficit is overstated because, unlike oil, which is consumed, gold has tangible value and can be readily traded in global markets.

Rajeev Malik, Senior Economist at CLSA writes in a report, “Although it is technically correct to include gold imports and exports in the current account balance as per IMF guidelines, we peg the “overestimation” of the current account deficit due to net gold imports to be around 20-30 percent.”

The problem, he says, is that India still needs to pay for its gold imports, which puts pressure on the rupee.

“The close to $200 billion in imported gold over the past decade does not represent a drain on India's resources, rather a diversification of India's wealth into precious metals,” says Taimur Baig, Chief Economist, India, Indonesia and Philippines at Deutsche Bank.

But according to Nomura’s Awasthi, the funds used to buy gold are “misallocated capital” as they should be going into funding infrastructure growth, for example. “When the capital will be needed for investments, it will be difficult to find as it has already been invested in gold.”

The recent move by the government to increase import duty is thus a small step in the right direction, says Awasthi.

According to Baig, since gold demand in India appears to be inelastic, that is, demand isn’t as affected by higher prices, raising duties makes sense.

“If the duty does not change gold demand, then the government at least earns some revenue. If it ends up reducing gold demand, then the need for foreign currency eases along with imports,” he told CNBC.
 
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this is good article, thanks you.

it gives us another light why India's current account deficit is in dare straits.
 
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even though the indian economy is a total service oriented ponzi scheme filled with debt, deficits, over-consumption and a collapsing currency, india has done one good thing that china has not done until recently, buy gold.

the chinese government buys worthless US bonds to fund american consumption while supressing our consumption by keeping the renminbi low, even though we are still very competitive even after the renminbi has appreciated more than 30% since july 2005.

we cant enjoy the fruits our of labour due to our currency peg, our purchasing power is transferred to the americans.

indians buying gold is the only good thing they have done, gold has intrinsic value, not like fiat currencies. gold retains its purchasing power.

we should buy as much gold and other precious metals, energy, raw materials, agriculture and technology with our $3 trillion reserves. we should limit the purchase of bonds in any country and diversify away from bonds as much and as quickly as possible into the things I listed.

dollar and euro as being inflated as the debts in those economies are staggering.
 
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even though the indian economy is a total service oriented ponzi scheme filled with debt, deficits, over-consumption and a collapsing currency, india has done one good thing that china has not done until recently, buy gold.

the chinese government buys worthless US bonds to fund american consumption while supressing our consumption by keeping the renminbi low, even though we are still very competitive even after the renminbi has appreciated more than 30% since july 2005.

we cant enjoy the fruits our of labour due to our currency peg, our purchasing power is transferred to the americans.

indians buying gold is the only good thing they have done, gold has intrinsic value, not like fiat currencies. gold retains its purchasing power.

we should buy as much gold and other precious metals, energy, raw materials, agriculture and technology with our $3 trillion reserves. we should limit the purchase of bonds in any country and diversify away from bonds as much and as quickly as possible into the things I listed.

dollar and euro as being inflated as the debts in those economies are staggering.

The main point is I don't see Chinese wearing heavy wearing gold ornaments... But the tradition and culture that there are many Indians, Particularly south Indian buy gold as major investment!
 
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we have more gold than UK and Turkey combined.
 
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How much has gold gone up recently? Year 2000 price was $279.11 per ounce, now its $1666.10 (US dollars) Always seems during wars or turbulence gold has been the fallback currency. Something is happening here, speculation or more?
 
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even though the indian economy is a total service oriented ponzi scheme filled with debt, deficits, over-consumption and a collapsing currency, india has done one good thing that china has not done until recently, buy gold.

the chinese government buys worthless US bonds to fund american consumption while supressing our consumption by keeping the renminbi low, even though we are still very competitive even after the renminbi has appreciated more than 30% since july 2005.

we cant enjoy the fruits our of labour due to our currency peg, our purchasing power is transferred to the americans.

indians buying gold is the only good thing they have done, gold has intrinsic value, not like fiat currencies. gold retains its purchasing power.

we should buy as much gold and other precious metals, energy, raw materials, agriculture and technology with our $3 trillion reserves. we should limit the purchase of bonds in any country and diversify away from bonds as much and as quickly as possible into the things I listed.

dollar and euro as being inflated as the debts in those economies are staggering.
I agree wholeheartedly with WS-10. In my opinion the PRC made flawed decisions a decade ago when, frightened by the 1998 crisis, it sold off its precious metals and off-currency reserves in favor of dollar assets. The size of these transactions distorted the world's monetary system and fueled stock and property bubbles. People like me were saying in 2000 that China should be buying 500 tons of gold a year, not 50, and hold more in Euros...

I see the report as fundamentally flawed because to Indians gold is a banking reserve and form of personal savings, not a consumable. Anything the Indian government does to damage this relationship - like taxing gold transactions - needlessly weakens the rupee. If the Indian CB is worried about currency reserves they can buy gold with rupees from the population and sell the gold for foreign currency. End of problem.
 
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I agree wholeheartedly with WS-10. In my opinion the PRC made flawed decisions a decade ago when, frightened by the 1998 crisis, it sold off its precious metals and off-currency reserves in favor of dollar assets. The size of these transactions distorted the world's monetary system and fueled stock and property bubbles. People like me were saying in 2000 that China should be buying 500 tons of gold a year, not 50, and hold more in Euros...

I see the report as fundamentally flawed because to Indians gold is a banking reserve and form of personal savings, not a consumable. Anything the Indian government does to damage this relationship - like taxing gold transactions - needlessly weakens the rupee. If the Indian CB is worried about currency reserves they can buy gold with rupees from the population and sell the gold for foreign currency. End of problem.
That is exactly what india is going to do if their current account deficit continues to worsen.
 
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Sadly India is just appealing to their population with these half-assed approaches. The best way to reduce the trade deficit is to develop an efficient industry. Imo these import duties are like a drop of water on a hot plate and in some cases even hurt more than they're good: exhibit A putting duties on Chinese power equipment, simply forces India to go for more expensive european/american technology and slows down the industrie that desperately needs a reliable electricity source. All at the hope someday the domestic power supplier can grow while the demand is now
 
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this is good article, thanks you.

it gives us another light why India's current account deficit is in dare straits.

Please India keep buying more gold......much better than US bonds which can be worthless any given time....future is gold not currency
 
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HAHAHA!! Never underestimate the capacity of some to turn ever single posiitve of India into a negative. I don't think any sensible economist in this world would say buying gold was a bad thing, buying US treasury bonds yes but not gold- gold will always be worth something.
 
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been buying gold for the last 10 yrs . never saw it depreciate. on the other hand stocks do . :)
 
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Does it include Golds held in ETF form?

been buying gold for the last 10 yrs . never saw it depreciate. on the other hand stocks do . :)

Gold won't appreciate much in the coming 2-3 years, go for Debt funds or bonds for the time being. Will fetch better returns.
 
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Guys need not worry......Our Every FM and every Economist always says our fundamentals are strong Actually what they mean is it is the FM in every house aka Lady in the kitchen who knows how to take care of local budget and saving ......till she is incharge ...India will keep on buying gold..keep on saving .... peace out:victory:
 
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