Posted on 12 Mar 2015 by Koos Jansen The Mechanics Of The Chinese Domestic Gold Market Chinese gold market essentials My previous posts (part one, two, three) on the structure of the Chinese gold market I started writing a few years ago and additional information has been published in little bits and pieces all over my blog. About time for a new comprehensive post on the basic mechanics of the Chinese domestic gold market. According to my analysis the structure of the Chinese market with the Shanghai Gold Exchange (SGE) at its core has been designed by China’s central bank, (i) to monitor physical gold traded in Chinese domestic gold market, (ii) monitor the amount of gold added to Chinese (non-government) reserves, (iii) to grant all gold added to Chinese (non-government) reserves and traded in the Chinese wholesale market to be of the highest quality, (iiii) to provide the Chinese people direct access to the wholesale market. Sprouted from the centrally minded Chinese authorities, the SGE system was implemented to stimulate the citizenry to buy physical gold and to develop the Chinese gold market in order to support the internationalization of the renminbi. The reports that provided the base on which I’ve analyzed the structure of the Chinese market are: • China Gold Association (CGA) Gold Yearbook 2006, 2007, 2008, 2013 (Chinese) • SGE Annual Report 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011 (English and Chinese) • China Gold Market Report 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011 (English and Chinese) Most of these reports have been written in conjunction by the CGA, SGE, PBOC and Shanghai Futures Exchange (SHFE).
Screenshot from the China Gold Market Report 2011 In my research I’ve also been helped by sources in China mainland with expertise of the Chinese domestic market and global market. Much information is only written in Chinese, which I never could have used without without proper translations. When the SGE was launched in 2002 the Chinese market didn’t change over night. Prior to 2002 the PBOC had the monopoly on gold and silver trade in China, the people were only allowed to purchase jewelry in designated shops. The inception of the SGE slowly started to liberalize the market; individuals were allowed to invest in gold in 2004. In 2007 the gold market fully functioned as was planned, for the first time SGE withdrawals equaled Chinese wholesale demand that year. From the CGA Gold Yearbook 2007: 2007 年,上海黄金交易所黄金出库量 363.194 吨,即我国当年的黄金需求量,比 2006 年增长了 48.02%,低于供给增长率 8.82 个百分点。