Gold is sparkling again: Expert
Gold is sparkling again: Expert
Local gold prices soared back to hit VND47.7 million (US$2,053) per tael ($1,703.7 per ounce).
Each tael of gold increased between VND400,000 and VND600,000 from its level on March 5. The price gap between selling and buying was more than VND1 million.
At the beginning of the day, Doji was asking VND47.7 million for each tael of gold, while Sai Gon Jewellery Company (SJC) posted VND47.25 million per tael. Bao Tin Minh Chau gold firm listed its precious metal at VND47.35 million each in the selling prices.
Smaller shops were also asking for similar prices.
On the global market, gold prices inched higher on Friday and were poised for their biggest weekly gain since October 2011, as mounting worries over the economic fallout from the fast-spreading coronavirus drove investors towards the safe-haven metal.
On the gold exchange Kitco, prices rose 2 per cent to $1,677 per ounce ($2,020 per tael) on Friday’s morning.
In the local market, Bao Tin Minh Chau recorded a surge in transactions in the morning with 55 per cent buyers and 45 per cent sellers. The firm said on its website it was a good time for investors to trade gold to make a profit.
Talking to Viet Nam News, Phan Dung Khanh, investment director of Maybank Kim Eng Securities, said: “The sell-buy price gap is large again now. Investors should take great caution with gold trading.”
Khanh thought the gap between selling and buying was kept at maximum at VND500,000-700,000 for the last few years. “In the last several weeks, it has been of more than VND1 million. Prices could fluctuate a lot.”
Khanh said besides Covid-19 epidemic, the fear of the economic crisis, China-US tensions, Gulf issues and others had added to the sharp increase.
Most important, according to Khanh, “was the net buying of gold in a lot of central banks.”
According to the World Gold Council's report named "Gold demand trends full year and Q4 2019”, released on January 30, the central bank net purchases in 2019 were remarkable. The annual total of 650.3 tonnes is the second highest level of annual purchases for 50 years, highlighting the importance central banks place on having an allocation of gold in their reserve portfolio. The highest level was recorded in 2018 at 656.2 tonnes.
As Khanh thought the global prices could reach $2,000 per ounce ($2,410 per tael) this year, he said: “Gold is sparkling again.”