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UAE deal poses a survival challenge for Indian bullion refineries

Under this gold will be imported at a duty lower than applicable to refineries

gold
Photo: Bloomberg
Rajesh Bhayani Mumbai
4 min read Last Updated : Dec 13 2022 | 11:27 PM IST
Gold import from the UAE at a lower rate of duty -- in terms of an agreement -- has posed a survival challenge for the Indian refining industry while hurting the price discovery of the metal, with the India International Bullion Exchange starting operations at GIFT City.

The problem has arisen after the government signed the Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (CEPA) with the UAE. Under it, Indian jewellery manufacturers have been allowed to import gold at a concessional rate of 14 per cent against 15 per cent, which is normal.

The CEPA came into force in May this year but because of its procedures, import is yet to scale up. More than 400 jewellery makers have been issued tariff rate quotas for concessional import.

The move has hurt Indian bullion refineries, which are allowed to import dore, or unrefined gold, at a duty 0.65 percentage points lower than normal.

However, 1 the per cent discount on import from the UAE has disturbed refining business equations because refiners are getting dore at 14.35 per cent while jewellery manufacturers can import refined gold at 14 per cent.

The matter doesn’t end here. The goods paying a lower duty can be sold in the open market at a discount and refiners cannot compete with them.

James Joseph, managing director, CGR Metalloys, Kochi, one of the large bullion refineries, said “the lower duty import has posed a challenge to the bullion-refining business in India where 500 tonnes of gold is refined every year. Last month, gold refiners did not import gold dore due to viability issues. However, with demand rising, some imports began this month”.

Under the deal, 120 tonnes is allowed to be imported at a lower duty, but until the limit is touched, the viability of other supply routes will be affected.

Another issue is that there hasn’t been much response at the India International Bullion Exchange at GIFT City, where gold trading has been permitted.

Industry officials say gold imported under the CEPA is causing distortions at the exchange. A few consignments were imported through the exchange and cleared after the 14 per cent duty was paid.

In the Mumbai market, gold is traded at a discount of $10 or more per ounce.

The lower duty also raises risks in circular trading. To encourage the circular routing of gold jewellery export, the CEPA is an attractive tool.

Also, under the deal 5 per cent import duty on jewellery is waived in Dubai on export. This leads to perfect circular trading and hawala, and the melting cost is adjusted against concession in import duty. The same jewellery can be melted and imported.

Traders will not be able to import gold under this arrangement

Chirag Sheth, principal consultant, Metal Focus, said “there are already multiple prices in the Indian bullion market and the CEPA has added one more such level. There will be some loss to the industry initially”.

In India, there are different prices of smuggled gold, recycled gold refined by Indian refineries, gold at the black market, and officially imported gold.
All that shines...
500 tonnes- Gold refined by Indian refineries per annum. The installed capacity is much higher
250-300 tonnes- Dore or unrefined gold processed every year
200-250 tonnes- Recycled gold refined every year
Gold falls by Rs 8; silver jumps Rs 82

Gold price fell Rs 8 to Rs 54,534 per 10 grams in the national capital on Tuesday, amid a fall in prices of precious metal in overseas market, according to HDFC Securities.

In the last trade, it had settled at Rs 54,542 per 10 grams. Silver rose  Rs 82 per kg to Rs 68,267 per kilogram. In the international market, gold was quoting at $1,787.80 per ounce.

“Dollar hovering around five months low in thin trading volume as investors remained cautious ahead of US Consumer Inflation data,” said Saumil Gandhi, senior research analyst (commodities) at HDFC Securities. PTI

Topics :gold refinersFTAUAEBullion industrybullion dealers goldfree trade agreementRegional Comprehensive Economic PartnershipGold trade

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