By
AFP
Published
Apr 20, 2008
Reading time
3 minutes
Download
Download the article
Print
Text size

Newly rich Chinese take a shine to gold

By
AFP
Published
Apr 20, 2008

BEIJING, April 20, 2008 (AFP) - Li Zhixin spent weeks planning his one-day family tour of Beijing's historic sites, but instead found himself in one of the city's shopping malls, watching his wife happily trying on gold necklaces.


Photo : Mike Clarke/AFP

"I can't complain -- we just like gold," said the 30-year-old steel plant worker from Tangshan, an industrial city southeast of Beijing.

"Gold is a better store of wealth than platinum," he added, as his mother-in-law counted a wad of cash beside him. "Of course, diamonds are lovely. But we can't afford the big ones and are not interested in small stones."

They finally bought a pendant necklace for more than 3,000 yuan (439 dollars), more than two months' income for an average Chinese urban resident.

With per-capita disposable income in cities up 17.2 percent to 13,786 yuan in 2007, gold jewellery is no longer beyond the reach of masses of Chinese consumers on the lookout for something luxurious.

"People buy gold jewellery for anniversaries, weddings, or as gifts for holidays," said Daisy Yan, a saleswoman at the Xin Dong An Department Store in downtown Beijing.

"First it's a pretty adornment, also I think it's maybe about vanity, a way to show how rich the wearer is."

Figures from the World Gold Council showed sales of gold jewellery in China hit a record high of 302.2 tonnes in 2007, up 34 percent on the previous year.

China has now overtaken the United States to become the world's second largest buyer of gold jewellery after India.

But behind the remarkable growth lies a deep Chinese traditional appreciation of the precious metal as a hedge against social and economic risks.

"I'm more confident in gold -- we've been buying it for so many years in the past anyway," said 78-year-old Wu Peifen, who was selecting a wedding gift for her grandson at Beijing's Wangfujing Department Store.

High inflation and a 41-percent slump in the domestic stock market this year have added further momentum to China's drive to buy gold.

"The stock market is not as good as before, and people do not feel safe parking all their savings in banks," said Lin Yuhui, an analyst with the China International Futures in the southern city of Shenzhen.

"So they tend to buy gold as a means to hedge inflationary risks."

Spurred by strong demand and international price rises, one gram (0.035 ounces) of pure gold jewellery sold at a new high of 242 yuan in Beijing in March, up nine percent in just two months, earlier state media reports said.

On the London Bullion Market, the price of gold rose to 944.13 dollars per ounce on Friday, up more than 37 percent from a year ago.

But Chinese consumers are not deterred by rising prices, experts said. Rather, they increasingly view gold as not only a means to protect wealth but also as an efficient part of their investment portfolio.

"In fact, higher gold prices helped to stimulate investment purchases of the metal... as consumers were attracted by the strong returns generated by the metal," the World Gold Council said in a recent report about the China market.

It said investment demand for gold at the retail level amounted to 23.9 tonnes in 2007, a rise of 60 percent compared with 2006.

However, for young Chinese, fashion appears to be more important than potential return.

"What I want is something fashionable and special," said Zhang Xiangyu, a 25-year-old beauty parlour worker, as she browsed gold earrings and bracelets in a jewellery store with her boyfriend.

"I won't waste time thinking too much -- I'll buy it as long as I like the look of it.

by Fran Wang

Copyright © 2024 AFP. All rights reserved. All information displayed in this section (dispatches, photographs, logos) are protected by intellectual property rights owned by Agence France-Presse. As a consequence you may not copy, reproduce, modify, transmit, publish, display or in any way commercially exploit any of the contents of this section without the prior written consent of Agence France-Presses.