Global demand for gold dropped nine percent in the third quarter, hit by weak buying in key market India, industry body the World Gold Council said Thursday. World demand in the three months to the end of September fell to 915 tonnes compared with one year earlier to stand at the lowest level since the third quarter of 2009, the WGC said in a statement.
"What drove the demand to be weak was first and foremost India," John Mulligan, a Council director, told AFP. "If you look at the figures, (Indian) jewellery demand was down 25 percent compared to the third quarter of 2016 and coin demand 23-percent" lower, he added.
India is the world's second-biggest purchaser of gold behind only China but has seen demand hit by a series of government measures, including a new tax system and anti-money laundering regulation. In China, demand for gold jewellery jumped 13 percent in the reporting period and soared 57 percent for coins. "The trend in the market is towards what they call 3D hard gold," explained Mulligan.
"It's actually pure gold but it uses technology which means the pure gold is given a very hard surface, but it's a light piece, usually hollow." In Britain, "demand was hit by pre-Brexit jitters, with consumers uncertain as to the likely economic impact of" the country's departure from the European Union, the WGC said.
The US was the best-performing industrialised Western jewellery market. "With demand of 26.9 tonnes, the US saw its strongest third-quarter since 2012," the Council said. "The sound economic and employment environment has supported consumer sentiment this year" in the world's biggest economy.
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