Gold discounts in India deepen as volatility hurts demand; purchases in China steady


Gold ​traded at a wide discount in India this ⁠week as price volatility weighed, while demand in China remained steady with the country’s central bank reporting its largest monthly increase in gold ‌reserves in more than 2-1/2 years in June.

International spot gold prices slipped to a two-week low, retreating from ‌an over 2 per cent jump last week. Domestic gold prices in ‌India ⁠were also trading around 144,800 rupees per 10 ⁠grams on Friday, after rising to 148,069 last week.

“Buyers are now waiting for a bigger drop in prices before making purchases,” said Ashok Jain, proprietor ​of Mumbai-based gold wholesaler Chenaji ‌Narsinghji.

Dealers offered gold at discounts of up to $19 an ounce over official domestic prices this week, including 15 per cent import and 3 per cent sales taxes, compared with premiums of up to $5 ‌an ounce and discounts of up to $7 an ounce ​a week earlier.

“Retail buying has slowed, and most transactions are now exchanges of old jewellery for new. ⁠As a result, jewellers have little need to replenish inventories by buying gold from banks,” a Mumbai-based bullion dealer with a ‌private bank said.

In China, bullion traded at discounts of $1 to premiums of $5 an ounce to the global benchmark spot price , compared to last week, when it traded at par to discounts of $2.

“The central bank added 480,000 ounces in June, extending its streak to 20 months and lifting reserves to ‌75.44 million ounces. This counter-cyclical buying is helping stabilize prices,” said Bernard Sin, ​regional director of Greater China at MKS PAMP.

In Hong Kong, gold traded between a $1 discount and a $1.70 premium.

Hong ⁠Kong launched a central clearing system for gold on Tuesday and ⁠also revived dollar gold futures trading, as it seeks to become a regional reserve hub for the precious ‌metal.

In Singapore, gold was sold between a $1 discount and a $2 premium, while in Japan, it was sold at a ​discount of $0.40.

Published on July 10, 2026