Demand for gold bars in China, the world’s biggest bullion
market, soared by more than half in the first six months of the year as
investors sought a haven from financial and geopolitical risks.
Sales climbed 51 percent to 158.40 metric tons from a year
earlier, the China Gold Association said in a press statement sent via
Wechat on Friday. Overall gold consumption climbed almost 10 percent to
545.2 tons, including 330.8 tons for jewelry sales, while industrial
demand and other uses increased 9 percent.
Investor concerns earlier this year over the depreciation of
Chinese currency and instability in the stock market, as well as worries
about the slowdown in property prices, spurred demand for gold. Imports
from Hong Kong climbed last month as gold retreated on the global
market, according to data from the Hong Kong Census and Statistics
Department compiled by Bloomberg.
“Physical gold is playing an increasingly important role
in Chinese residents’ investment portfolio,” the association said.
“Gold is broadly favored by investors as a store of wealth as global
markets become more fragile, with the Federal Reserve raising
interest rates and increasing geopolitical uncertainty.”
Demand for all of 2017 may exceed 1,000 tons, the
highest level in four years, as bar sales surge, Zhang Yongtao, the
association’s secretary-general, said in an interview in May.
Domestic output, including production from imported feedstock, fell
6 percent to 241.5 tons in the first half, amid more stringent
environment rules and depletion of mine resources, the group said
Friday.
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