India Gold Soars

 | Sep 06, 2013 08:48AM ET

Gold denominated in Indian rupees just skyrocketed up near record highs, a far cry from recent dollar-gold action. Much of this extraordinary rally was fueled by the near-collapse of the Indian currency to new record lows against the US dollar. India’s deepening currency crisis has major implications for domestic gold demand and thus global gold prices. Nothing ignites gold buying like a collapsing currency!

Indians’ deep cultural affinity for gold is legendary. For decades it was the world’s biggest consumer of gold, although China is overtaking it now. According to the World Gold Council, in the first half of 2013 India still accounted for a staggering 28% of global consumer gold demand! The 566.5 metric tons of the yellow metal Indians bought in the last two quarters greatly dwarf Americans’ 83.4t purchased.

It is estimated that Indian households hold 31,000t of gold worth a breathtaking $1395b at $1400 per ounce. A single temple alone in southern India (Tirumala near Tirupati) is believed to hold 1000t itself, worth $45b! It gains another 3t annually in gold offerings from devout Hindu pilgrims. More than half of Indians’ personal savings is held in hard assets including land, houses, cattle, and of course gold.

Despite this vast absolute wealth Indians have invested in gold, they still have very little per capita. With 1210m people, India’s population is massive beyond belief. Let’s assume just half are of working age, when they can save and invest the surplus fruits of their labors. Dividing India’s total consumer gold hoard by 605m people equals per-capita holdings of merely 1.65 ounces! That certainly isn’t excessive.

Nevertheless, India’s government has been waging an aggressive war on gold this year. The country is struggling with a record current-account deficit that ran 4.8% of GDP in fiscal 2012 (ending March). India’s two biggest imports by far are oil and gold, accounting for 70% of its trade deficit. Of that, gold represented a quarter. But oil is far more essential for civilization than gold, so New Delhi has targeted it.

In order to try and curb gold imports to reduce its trade deficit, the Indian government has greatly hiked the metal’s import taxes this year. Import duties were raised by half to 6% in late January, by a third to 8% in early June, and then again by a quarter to 10% in mid-August! In addition to gold’s duties being 2.5x higher than their 4% when 2013 dawned, New Delhi also applied the latest 10% to silver and platinum to fight substitution.

How are these steep and punitive gold import taxes working out? Not so well from the government’s perspective. The World Gold Council recently reported that Indian consumer gold demand soared 48% year-over-year in 2013’s first half! So Indians are still buying gold aggressively, much to the chagrin of the government. Instead of retarding demand, these tariffs are simply fueling a boom in gold smuggling.

Get The News You Want
Read market moving news with a personalized feed of stocks you care about.
Get The App

The Indian government really has no one to blame but itself for these surging gold imports. It has been seriously mismanaging economic reforms and failing to upgrade deteriorating infrastructure. Corruption is rife, and regulation is suffocating and heavy-handed. Vodafone is one key example. This British telecom company was capriciously slapped with a gigantic retroactive tax bill for 50 years of mergers!

All this has led to waning confidence in the Indian government and its fiat currency, the rupee. Both Indians and foreign investors alike have been exiting the rupee, exacerbating its slide over the past couple years or so. The Indians trade their surplus rupees for physical gold, which must be imported, preserving their purchasing power. The foreigners sell their rupees for other major currencies and move on.

These foreign capital outflows have mostly come from bonds, catapulting India’s benchmark 10-year yield up near 9.25% in late August. It hadn’t been higher since August 2008 heading into the stock panic. Stocks were hit hard too in recent weeks, with foreigners selling $1b worth of Indian shares in just 8 trading days. They’ve dumped $3.6b in Indian stocks since early June, intensifying the rupee’s plunge.

The hypocrisy of the Indian government through this snowballing currency crisis has been epic. India’s finance minister Palaniappan Chidambaram has spearheaded the government’s war on gold this year, often backtracking and lying. He’d keep assuring Indians that New Delhi was done mucking around in the domestic gold market, and then within weeks he’d announce some new control on gold imports.

After this blizzard of new taxes and regulations in 2013, he addressed the parliament on August 28th. He had the gall to say, “What we need now is not less reforms but more reforms. What we need now is not more restrictions but less restrictions. What we need now is not a closed economy but a more open economy.” Is a less-restrictive more-open economy one where New Delhi arrogantly tells Indians how to invest?

The result of all this nonsense and mismanagement has been a plummeting rupee and therefore soaring gold price. Indians are not stupid, they understand what havoc their government is wreaking. This first chart looks at gold in rupees per ounce (blue). These are not local price quotes, but clean forex-implied prices based on the dollar-gold level and the rupee-dollar exchange rate. That is rendered below in red.