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China's Demand For Gold Rises Sharply
Tom Burroughes
14 August 2013
China’s
demand for gold surged by 54 per cent in the first six months of 2013, pushing
the Asian country towards being the world’s top bullion consumer ahead of India and
helping to bolster the yellow metal after its recent decline, media reports
said. Citing figures issued earlier this week by the China Gold
Association, reports said consumption reached 706.36 metric tons in the first half
of the year. The association is supported financially by miners, refiners and
jewellery makers and retailers. Demand hit a record 385.5 metric tons in the second quarter
of this year, about double the figure from a year earlier, the Wall Street
Journal said, having analysed details of the data. Figures from the , the pan-industry and
investment group, are due to issue figures later this week. One factor which may have prompted the surge in demand has
been the recent drop in the price of gold – currently trading around $1,300 per
ounce (source: BullionVault); in September 2011, the metal fetched over $1,921
as fears of a eurozone crack-up and concerns about the scale of central bank
monetary expansion boosted the price. Subsequently, expectations have grown
that the US Federal Reserve in particular will decelerate, and ultimately
reverse, its quantitative easing policy enacted since the 2008 financial
crisis. These expectations have underpinned the dollar, and worked to reduce
gold’s attractions as a safe-haven asset.