Mumbai: India's gold demand declined 18 per cent to 135.5 tonnes in the first three months of this year, mainly due to a sharp rise in prices, according to the World Gold Council (WGC). The demand stood at 165.8 tonnes in the first three months of 2021. In terms of value, gold demand dropped 12 per cent to Rs 61,550 crore in the January-March period. It stood at Rs 69,720 crore in the year-ago period, the 'Gold Demand Trends Q1 2022' report released by the WGC said. WGC Regional CEO, India, Somasundaram P R told PTI that gold prices began rising in January, increasing by 8 per cent to Rs 45,434 per 10 grams (without taxes) in the first quarter of this year, mainly due to geopolitical tensions.
In comparison, the prices were at around Rs 42,045 crore in January-March 2021 period. As per the report, total jewellery demand in the country during the latest March quarter fell 26 per cent to 94.2 tonnes. It was at 126.5 tonnes in the same period last year. In terms of value, jewellery demand plunged 20 per cent to Rs 42,800 crore in the first quarter of this year. The same was at Rs Rs 53,200 crore in the year-ago period. "After rising to record levels in the fourth quarter of 2021, India's gold jewellery demand fell by 26 per cent year-on-year in the first quarter of this year to 94 tonnes. Since 2010, barring the pandemic periods, this is only the third time the first quarter total has been below 100 tonnes," Somasundaram said.
Further, he said that fewer auspicious days coupled with a sharp rise in gold prices meant fewer weddings and a pause in retail demand, with households postponing gold buying in anticipation of a price correction. This year, he said the overall demand for gold is likely to be around 800-850 tonnes. Total investment demand for gold increased 5 per cent to 41.3 tonnes in the latest March quarter compared to 39.3 tonnes in the same period a year ago. According to the report, in value terms, gold investment demand was up 13 per cent at Rs 18,750 crore. It was at Rs 16,520 crore in the same quarter of 2021.