Gold
imports could rise on excise removal - trade body
Reuters
REUTERS/Krishnendu
Halder
From MUMBAI
(Reuters) - Gold imports by India, the world's biggest buyer of
bullion, could rise on pent-up demand from jewellers after the government
decided to scrap an excise duty on jewellery it imposed in March, the
head of a trade body said on Monday.
Jewellers
in India, which imported more than 950 tonnes last year -- a new record -- went
on strike to protest against the duty and ended their action only
after government reassurances that it would consider scrapping the
tax.
A Reuters poll in March had estimated gold
imports to fall to 655 tonnes in 2012, but with the removal of the duty,
imports could be above this level and help branded jewellers such as help Titan
Industries (NSI:TITAN.NS - News) and Rajesh Exports (NSI:RAJESHEXPO).
"People
(gold traders) who were on the sidelines will come back to the market...
jewellery demand will improve in the coming weeks," Prithviraj
Kothari, president of the Bombay Bullion Association, told Reuters by
telephone.
"It's
a good move by the government... Since March 16 till today there was no
business for the whole value chain."
The duty
rollback is the latest policy flip-flop by a government that has struggled to
liberalise the economy enough to deal with slowing growth and ebbing investor
confidence. Conflicting government views on cotton and sugar exports have
dented the country's reputation of being a dependable supplier.
The
government will withdraw the excise duty on all jewellery effective March 17 --
the date it was introduced -- Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee told
parliament.
The
government has not rolled back its doubling of the import duty on gold to 4
percent of value.
Gold
prices, that gained more than 39 percent since 2011, were at 28,988 rupees per
10 grams on Monday, down 0.67 percent.
(Reporting
by Siddesh Mayenkar; editing by Krittivas Mukherjee)
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