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Jewellery, precious metals sales up 37.4% y-o-y in March
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Households seek potential safe haven, inflation hedge
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Chinese families record 9.9 trln yuan of savings in Q1
By Winni Zhou and Tom Westbrook SHANGHAI/SINGAPORE, April 18 (Reuters) - Violet Zhu, a Shanghai-based electronic components exporter, has been attending jewellery auctions and chatting on social media forums on the subject this year, looking to invest in rubies and diamonds. "I don't have the brain for stock investments, and I am waiting to redeem mutual fund products once they break even. But in the meantime, I have been continuously buying gems," says Zhu. Zhu says she is searching for oddly-shaped rubies of higher grades, hoping the value of those little gems will surge with time. She is not alone.
Jewellery and precious metals consumption in China soared
37.4% in March from a year earlier underpinning a 13.6% jump for
the quarter and topping the list of items that stoked a surge in
first-quarter retail sales, official data showed on Tuesday.
China's economy grew at a faster-than-expected pace in the
first quarter, with retail sales rising 10.6%, beating forecasts
for a 7.4% increase by a large margin.
The interest in precious metals is a worrying indicator that
China's efforts to revive its economy via domestic spending,
after years of strict COVID curbs, may not be working.
"High-end consumption gives us a bit of a surprise but
overall the weak recovery story remains intact," said Marco Sun,
chief financial analyst at MUFG Bank (China).
The appeal of jewellery and gold has risen after the biggest
global banking crisis in more than a decade, as the failure of
Silicon Valley Bank and the forced sale of lender Credit Suisse
rocked investor confidence.
"Consumer interest in precious metals (comes) as a potential
safe haven and inflation hedge, as many consumers do not expect
low inflation in China to continue," said Ben Cavender, managing
director at China Market Research Group.
Shying from risk, Chinese families are saving more.
Households savings grew by 9.9 trillion yuan in the
January-March period, after rising a record 17.8 trillion yuan
in 2022. In 2021, they grew by 9.9 trillion yuan.
"Economic fundamentals, risk aversion and the recovery of
domestic consumption all drive the investment demand for
jewellery and precious metals," said Pang Xichun, research
director at Nanjing RiskHunt Investment Management Co.
(Reporting by Winni Zhou, Jason Xue and Tom Westbrook; Editing
by Vidya Ranganathan and Sonali Paul)