Reuters
Shenzhen/Singapore


As Chinese consumers cut back on gold purchases for a second year in a row, nowhere is the slowdown being felt more than in the country’s once-bustling jewellery manufacturing and retail hub of Shuibei.
Gold demand has taken a hit from a slowing economy and Beijing’s anti-corruption drive, which has cut demand for luxury products, but there are fears of a more protracted loss of confidence among buyers in the world’s top consumer of the precious metal.
With buying in No 2 consumer India also soft, another year of weak Chinese demand would help pile more pressure on global gold prices languishing near six-year lows.
The hundreds of jewellery stores in Shuibei, a district of Shenzhen only a short hop over the border from Hong Kong, have seen business take a downturn since a buying boom peaked in 2013 as once-voracious Chinese consumers turn cautious.
“They don’t have confidence in gold now given the weak prices, so demand won’t pick up anytime soon,” said Wang Zhichang, regional manager of the Glory Gold store, adding revenue was likely to fall a further 10% next year on top of a drop of 10-20% this year.
Wang, who was among 30 staff in the store at a time when there were no customers, said that a number of jewellery factories had closed in the past year in the area.
Big retail chains, including Chow Tai Fook, the top jeweller by market value, are also closing branches and cutting back store openings in the mainland and Hong Kong.
Chow Tai Fook last month reported a 42% drop in net profit in the April-September period and said it would open only a net of 60 stores in China in its current financial year ending March, from a previous target of 150.
“Customers have become more rational with their purchases,” a company spokesperson said by email.
Illustrating the strains in the industry, Chinese banks have begun to see loan defaults by jewellery manufacturers, hurt by weak sales, Reuters reported last month.
From just 200 tonnes in 2003, Chinese demand for gold jewellery, bars and coins hit an all-time high of more than 1,000 tonnes in 2013, when prices of the metal snapped a 12-year rally.
Demand has since fallen back and with prices now down by more than a third since 2012 Chinese confidence has weakened in gold as an investment.
One of the biggest blows to China’s gold consumption has been the pullback of “dama” buying, a Chinese term for middle-aged women known for their love of hunting out a bargain.
They were at the forefront of the 2013 gold rush but many have had their fingers burnt as gold has repeatedly hit multi-year lows.
“The golden period of China’s dama demand has passed,” said Shu Jiang, chief analyst at Shandong Gold Group, the parent of Shandong Gold Mining Co.
Shu said unless there was a drastic price drop over a short period of time, the dama were unlikely to return, though others argued that what is really required is a rebound in prices.
“Ironically, what you actually need to see for physical demand to pick up is for prices to rally,” said Victor Thianpiriya, commodity strategist at ANZ, who expects Chinese demand to decline next year.
“The confidence in gold as a supposed safe haven or as an investment has been battered over the last few years,” said Thianpiriya.
Indian demand has also taken a hit and in the December quarter is likely to fall to the lowest in eight years, hurt by poor investment demand and droughts that have slashed earnings for millions of farmers.
A slump in demand in the two biggest consumers could further pressure miners, such as Barrick Gold Corp, which has been forced to sell assets and cut costs to trim debt amid a slide in profits from three years of falling global gold prices.
Though a fall in the value of local currencies in big producers such as Australia and South Africa has partly shielded miners’ exposure to weaker demand.
To prop up demand, retailers are trying increase their online presence to attract younger buyers, who prefer more fashionable lower purity 18 karat jewellery over the higher purity and more pricey pieces often favoured by older women.
With the gold price outlook still bearish, some in the industry fear they might have to wait longer for a rebound.
“We’re expecting another 20% fall in business (next year),” said Zhang Fengming, the owner of another gold store in Shuibei, as he chain-smoked in his upstairs office.
“The Chinese will get back into gold when it becomes more of an attractive investment. I think in three to five years’ time there will be a rebound,” said Zhang, a 30-year veteran of the jewellery business.

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