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Below is a snippet from the latest weekly issue from www.GoldForecaster.com | www.SilverForecaster.com
Gold - Chinese rising demand affecting the gold price much more...
The slow liberalization of the gold market is a fact of life albeit slow and
not likely to see huge tonnages [like 3,000 tonnes] flow into the country
quickly. But in this gold market it doesn't take huge tonnages to move the
gold price.
We
hear from China that 90,000 bank accounts are being opened every day. They
need a bank account to qualify to buy gold [here is the control from the government
and bankers over the rising gold market]. The Chinese public has indicated
before that it would be happy to invest between 10 and 30% of their savings
in gold, which they must now do through their bank and consequently the Central
Bank. We are not even going to attempt to put a figure on what will go into
gold in China, but we have to highlight one fairly dramatic likelihood:
The People's Bank of China [the Central Bank] is liberalizing to facilitate
a professional gold market because local supply is being overtaken by demand.
Even growing supply is not going to contain that controlled demand so gold
will have to be imported in greater and greater quantities.
The demand to date from China has been coped with by local supply, so the
global market has not seen that demand. The addition of Chinese production
to the total as well as its demand is primarily academic and has not affected
the gold price to date. However increasing Chinese demand for gold will
draw off from external supplies, so will affect the global gold price.
In effect then demand over around 240 tonnes in China has to be satisfied
by the market. So if the demand doubles [and for a country that size in the
process of enriching itself, this would not stretch credibility whatsoever]
the next 240 tonnes will likely come from London. This will draw off from a
market taking the price up because demand is growing there.
Now
we can get enthusiastic about gold demand from China even over relatively small
quantities. So we report that in the South of China, in Guangzhou, retail sales
of gold coins and gold products had reached 7.82 tonnes since February. That
would equate to 94 tonnes per annum. But what about the rest of the country?
In Beijing [northerly part of the country] a favorite piece of gold known as "lucky
balls" is proving popular. These are one-gram balls, worn around the neck or
wrist and are selling in their thousands.
The Chinese believe gold brings people good luck and is also a good investment
and in China 'luck' is a religion.
China eases up on gold shipments and trading of gold
China
will gradually relax restrictions on the shipment and trading of gold as the
country deregulates the precious metals market, the central bank said. The
nation wants to involve overseas investors, including banks, in gold trading,
the People's Bank of China said in its annual report on the financial market,
which was posted on its Web site today. The statement gave no timetable for
the changes.
At present, only China's four biggest commercial banks, together with some
smelters and jewelers, may import and export gold. The nation also bars overseas
investors from trading on the Shanghai Gold Exchange, which offers cash and
cash-deferred contracts for 150 domestic banks, miners, jewelers and traders.
"Relaxing trade rules will boost imports as domestic production cannot satisfy
demand," said Wang Xinyou, a gold trader at the Agricultural Bank of China
in Beijing.
China's authorities want to make the exchange one of the world's leading gold
markets, offering derivatives such as futures and options in addition to the
current physical transactions, the central bank said today in the report.
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