Global gold demand seen rising to 4-year high in 2019
London
GLOBAL demand for gold in 2019 will rise to the highest in four years as higher consumption by jewellers offsets a fall in purchases by central banks, an industry report said on Monday.
The world will consume 4,370 tonnes of gold this year, the most since 2015 and up slightly from 4,364 tonnes in 2018, consultancy Metals Focus said.
Its Gold Focus 2019 report also predicted that gold prices would average US$1,310 an ounce this year, up from US$1,268 in 2018 and the highest since 2013.
Gold currently trades around US$1,300 an ounce.
Gold consumption for jewellery will rise 3 per cent this year to 2,351 tonnes, driven by increases of 7 per cent in India and 3 per cent in China - the two largest markets - which will counter lower demand in the Middle East, Metals Focus said.
Purchases by the official sector, which surged almost 75 per cent in 2018 as central banks added gold to diversify their reserves, will slip 9 per cent this year to 600 tonnes, the report predicted.
Physical investment demand will remain largely unchanged from 2018 at 1,082 tonnes.
Metals Focus said gold supply would rise by one per cent to 4,707 tonnes, thanks to higher mine production and recycling and some producer hedging.
Helping gold prices to rise would be the end of interest rate rises by the US Federal Reserve, along with political and economic uncertainty around the world, Metals Focus said, but it added that a strong dollar would limit gains.
Gold is traditionally seen as a safe place to invest during periods of uncertainty.
Higher interest rates hurt gold because they make bullion, which pays no yield, less attractive to investors, while a stronger dollar can depress demand by making gold more expensive for buyers with other currencies. REUTERS
BT is now on Telegram!
For daily updates on weekdays and specially selected content for the weekend. Subscribe to t.me/BizTimes
Energy & Commodities
Orsted says Taiwan wind project to power TSMC on track for 2025 finish
Gold edges down as Middle East worries ebb
Oil rises as dollar slips, focus shifts to economic data
California to wrap up ExxonMobil plastics probe ‘in weeks’, AG says
Gold edges higher; hovers near one-week low on tempered Middle East fears
Why has gold’s inverse relationship with the US dollar reversed?