Japanese
consumers are poised to become net buyers of gold for the first time
in eight years
Japanese
Seek Refuge in Bullion as Yen Slumps, Inflation Looms
Japanese
consumers are poised to become net buyers of gold for the first time
in eight years as the yen’s decline and looming inflation drive
them to seek refuge in bullion, according to Standard Bank Plc.
26
April, 2013
Net
sales of gold bars and coins by Japanese individuals shrank to 10.1
metric tons in 2012, the smallest amount since 2005, data from the
World Gold Council show. A surge in purchases this month and the
chance to buy after bullion slumped into a bear market foreshadow a
turnaround in 2013, said Bruce Ikemizu, Standard Bank’s head of
commodities trading in Tokyo.
The
currency has depreciated 13 percent against the dollar this year and
is trading near a four-year low after the central bank’s pursuit of
unprecedented monetary easing to end deflation was unopposed by Group
of 20 nations. Inflation may rise above 1 percent in the 12 months
starting April 2014 and approach a 2 percent target as early as that
year, Bank of Japan (8301) policy board member Ryuzo Miyao said April
18.
“The
time has come for Japanese to buy gold with the government trying to
engineer inflation,” Ikemizu, who has traded commodities for almost
three decades, said in an interview in Tokyo yesterday. “Retail
investors are turning from sellers to buyers of bullion.”
Japanese
households have 1,547 trillion yen ($15.6 trillion) in financial
assets, according BOJ data. They purchased 22.9 tons of gold last
year from Tanaka Kikinzoku Kogyo K.K., Japan’s largest gold
retailer, and sold 28.6 tons to the company, at an average price of
4,321 yen a gram.
Tocom
Gold
Yen-denominated
gold futures on the Tokyo Commodity Exchange climbed to a record
5,081 yen a gram on Feb. 7, before slumping along with dollar-priced
bullion this month. The retail price of gold bars in Japan advanced
to the highest level since 1980 on April 10, according to Tanaka
Kikinzoku.
Tocom
gold futures fell 0.3 percent to 4,553 yen a gram at 9:04 a.m. in
Tokyo. Gold for immediate delivery posted the biggest decline since
1983 on April 15, and slid to $1,321.95 on April 16, the lowest level
since January 2011. It was down 0.3 percent at $1,422.48 at 9:04 a.m.
Gold
for delivery in Tokyo was offered at $1 to $1.50 an ounce higher than
the metal for delivery in London last week, as gold stockpiled by
Japanese bullion houses was depleted because of surging demand from
consumers, Ikemizu said.
Every
one-yen depreciation in the Japanese currency against the dollar can
boost bullion prices in Japan by 50 yen a gram, assuming the
international market is unchanged, Masahiro Arai, general manager at
Tokuriki Honten Co., the nation’s second- largest bullion retailer,
said on April 16.
Purchases
from Japan will partially absorb metal flowing out of exchange-traded
funds such as SPDR (GLD) Gold Trust and give support to the
international market, according to Ikemizu.
India,
China
In
India and China, the biggest gold-consuming nations, shoppers last
week lined up in bazaars from Mumbai to Shanghai to buy the metal for
brides, babies and strongboxes after prices fell. Indian consumers
bought a net 312.2 tons of gold bars and coins in 2012, while
purchases by individuals in China reached 265.5 tons, according to
the World Gold Council.
Ending
deflation would pave the way for Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe
to go ahead with a plan to double sales tax to 10 percent by October
2015 to reduce the nation’s fiscal deficit. The prospect of higher
taxes has also spurred consumers to buy gold, Kate Harada, general
manager at the precious metals department of Tanaka Kikinzoku, said
in an interview in Tokyo on April 16.
“As
Japanese begin paying more for fuel and some foods because of a
weakening yen, they’re wondering how to hedge the risk of rising
prices,” she said. “Gold is sought to protect against inflation
and the yen’s debasement.”
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