Gold trading continued to rise at a high rate in the first half
of this year, reflecting the sustained growth of China's gold
market since domestic trade was deregulated in 2001.
In the first five months of this year, gold traded on the
Shanghai Gold Exchange rose by 36.59 percent over the same period
of last year to reach 466.77 tons, the exchange announced on its
website last Wednesday. The equivalent transaction value was 71.82
billion yuan (US$8.98 billion), up 83.25 percent year-on-year.
But current turnover on the domestic exchange market is too
small to influence the international markets. Daily average
turnover on the Shanghai market is less than 1 percent of that in
London. Most of the gold contracts traded in developed exchange
markets are futures and options whereas the contracts traded on the
Shanghai exchange are limited to spot and spot with deferred
payments.
"The domestic spot gold price is expected to closely follow
international prices in the months ahead and the gap between the
two should further narrow," said Xu Zhipeng, a gold analyst with
the Shanghai Gold Coin Investment Co.
"Only from October to next January, when domestic demand for
gold will peak, will the domestic gold price deviate a little bit
away from the international price. At most other times, it simply
follows the international trend," added Xu.
Price movements on the domestic exchange were more synchronized
to the international price, the exchange noted. The price of gold
with the most purity Au99.99, for instance, traded at around 170
yuan (US$21) per gram in May when international gold prices hit a
25-year high at around US$700 per troy ounce (31 grams). It
corrected downward when the international price dropped to around
US$550 by mid-June.
Demand for gold usually peaks at year's end in China, mainly as
a result of jewellery makers, pushing up the domestic gold price.
But in recent years there has been less deviation from the
international price during the peak season as domestic supply and
demand for gold in China becomes more balanced, said analysts.
China's import of gold has declined since the turn of the
century to only 32 tons in 2003, while over 80 percent that year
came from domestic mines, according to a gold market report jointly
conducted by the World Gold Council, GFMS Ltd and China Financial
Services.
China's gold output last year reached a record 220.5 metric
tons, making China the world's fourth-biggest gold producer after
South Africa, the United States and Australia.
Output this year is set to rise by around 10 percent as the
international gold price is expected to hover high and drive up
gold production domestically, according to the National Development
and Reform Commission (NDRC), which oversees China's gold
market.
The NDRC announced earlier that gold production in the first
five months of the year rose by 12.44 percent to reach 88.8 tons,
while profit rose by 58.31 percent to 2.11 billion yuan (US$264
million).
(China Daily July 18, 2006)