India, the second largest importer of gold, has seen demand fall in the last three months on account of a rise in prices
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Since the start of 2024, gold prices are up 9 percent in rupee terms. The yellow metal trades at Rs 71,000 per 10 grams and is up 69 percent in rupee terms since the start of the Covid-19 pandemic in March 2020. Compare this with a 43 percent rise in the Sensex (if one excludes the month-long dip in March 2020) and it becomes clear why the metal is looked at as a currency and inflation hedge by Indian families. Its allure is hard to beat. (Gold’s performance would be even better in dollar terms as the rupee has depreciated 12 percent since the start of the pandemic.)
The recent rise is primarily on account of investors seeing gold as a hedge against inflation, rising geopolitical uncertainty in both Ukraine and the Middle East (Gaza). There is also an expectation that the dollar may not be the best bet for a country’s foreign exchange reserves on account of too much printing and the easing of US interest rates. The former would have long-term consequences for the value of the dollar, while the latter could cause the dollar to weaken in the short term.