Chinese residents welcome gold trade ( 2003-12-05 17:08) (Xinhua)
A resident in Chengdu city of
southwestern Sichuan province bought five ounces of gold this week in the
Chengdu branch of the Merchants Bank of China at the price of 16,647.5 yuan
(US$2,000 ), becoming the first investor to try physical gold trade in China.
Just half a month ago, the Bank of China (BOC), one of the four major state
banks in China, began selling gold-backed paper items to Chinese individuals in
Shanghai. The trade was welcomed by locals with one of the largest buys reaching
2,500 grams of gold in paper.
Insiders said that from "paper" to "physical" gold trade, China is now
providing more investment choices for its residents.
"The investment value of gold has long been screened owing to scarcity of
investment channels," said Gu Wenshuo, general manager of the comprehensive
section of the Shanghai Gold Exchange.
In the past five decades, nevertheless, the gold market was under a
government monopoly with gold consumption focused on jewelry or industrial use
in China. Total gold consumption is at a low level as compared with other
nations in the world. In 2002, Per-capita gold consumption in China was only
0.16 grams, far lower than 1.42 grams in the United States and the world's
average of 0.7 grams.
Chinese people have traditionally had the tradition of hoarding gold as a way
of securing savings against disasters, natural or man-made. Shanghai was the
largest gold trade center in the Far East in the 1930s and 1940s. But gold trade
was abolished with the founding of new China in 1949.
Xia Yanlin, researcher in Guangfa Securities Development Research Center,
cited gold as an deal good risk management instrument as the trend of it comes
against most financial tools.
Xia said China brings gold trade service to individuals at just the right
time. Against the backdrop of gloomy stock and securities markets on its
mainland and the rocketing gold price worldwide because of tension in
international relations, trading in gold is expected to become a crucial
investment arena for Chinese individuals.
Gold has exceeded 400 US dollars an ounce on the world market and is
reasserting its powerful and some would say mystical role in the world economy.
Affected by this, Shanghai Gold Exchange closed at 106.93 yuan per gram on
Thursday.
A recent questionnaire by the Beijing Gold Economic Development Research
Center in 10 major cities in China showed 70 per cent of respondents said that
they would invest in the gold trade if they had money and over 20 percent of
securities investors would transfer part of their capital to gold trade.
Experts predicted that nearly 7.5 million investors will try the gold trade
while continuing the securities trade in the future. Calculating that each one
will invest 10,000 yuan (about US$1,200 ) of capital, the trade will attract 75
billion yuan (some US$9 billion) of funds in total.
Astute and sharp-sighted commercial banks would never ignore potential income
from the intermediate business and the huge clients resources it would bring.
The other three state banks, namely, the Industrial and Commercial Bank of
China, the Construction Bank of China and the Agricultural Bank of China, have
all stepped up their preparations for launching gold trading.