India’s bank note ban to disrupt gold smuggling business

Thu Nov 10 2016
Lucy Harlow (4101 articles)
India’s bank note ban to disrupt gold smuggling business

MUMBAI India’s surprise move to abolish high-value bank notes has started to disrupt cash-based gold smuggling and should benefit official importers of the metal in the world’s second biggest consumer, industry officials said.

A drop in smuggling will allow banks and refiners to charge a premium over official local prices, which include a 10 percent import tax. For most of 2016 gold traded at a discount in India as smugglers undercut official importers.

Official importers welcomed Prime Minister Narendra Modi move this week to declare 500 and 1,000 rupee bills illegal and make them worthless for holders of unaccounted wealth.

Dealers charged a premium of up to $ 6 an ounce over official domestic prices on Thursday, compared to a discount of $ 3 an ounce last week.

“Smugglers grabbed market share by offering discounts,” said Surendra Mehta, the secretary of the India Bullion and Jewellers Association. “Now banks and refiners can claim back the business.”

Smugglers offered a discount as high as $ 100 an ounce in July, forcing banks and refiners to scale down their operations.

That resulted in an 84 percent dive in imports of gold-silver alloy, dore, to 11.1 tonnes in the third quarter from a year ago.

Gold smuggling could rise up to 160 tonnes in 2016 from 100-120 tonnes in 2015, the World Gold Council estimated earlier this week.

But Bachhraj Bamalwa, director of the All India Gems and Jewellery Trade Federation, said that will now change as he expects smuggling to fall sharply in the next few months. That will make dore refining economical again.

“Business is becoming normal after a long time,” said a gold dealer at a bank in Mumbai.

However, Modi’s move to rein in the black economy could lower gold imports by 100-150 tonnes next year from an annual average of about 800 tonnes, Mehta said. And that will be bad news for gold prices worldwide, though the shock election of Donald Trump as the next president of the United States has given a boost to prices.

Lucy Harlow

Lucy Harlow

Lucy Harlow is a senior Correspondent who has been reporting about Commodities, Currencies, Bonds etc across the globe for last 10 years. She reports from New York and tracks daily movement of various indices across the Globe