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Japan's gold exports at highest level since 1985


March 12, 2012 - Updated 1253 GMT (2053 HKT)
STORY HIGHLIGHTS

  • Gold prices have made historic gains, but the performance of gold equities has not followed suit.

  • Gold mining companies haven�t always shown their current enthusiasm for cutting investors in on the profits, but then again, most didn�t have nearly as much cash to share

  • Barrick Gold recently announced a boost in its dividend from .12 to .15 cents per share

  • Yamana earlier this month announced its second dividend increase for the year, from .18 to .20 cent
  • Gold shipments from Japan, the world's third-largest economy, are at the highest level since at least 1985 as individuals who purchased jewellery more than 20 years ago are selling it amid record prices.

    Shipments in the 10 months ended October totalled 95.6 tonne, according to Takahiro Morita, the Japandirector of the World Gold Council, who cited Ministry of Finance customs data. The previous high was 95.5 tonne in 2008.

    Bullion is set for an 11th year of gains as central banks join investors in purchasing the metal to diversify assets. Japan's largest gold retailer, Tanaka Kikinzoku Kogyo, said it bought 40% more bars and jewellery from individuals in the nine-month period ending September.

    Global gold investment jumped 33% to 468.1 tonne in the third quarter from a year earlier as bar and coin demand in Europe more than doubled to the most since the fourth quarter of 2008, according to the London-based council, a producer-funded group. "Japan's gold exports will reach 100 tonne this year," Morita said.

    Bullion exports to Thailand tripled and those to Singapore doubled in the 10 months ended October from a year earlier, according to statistics released by Japan's finance ministry. "More and more people who bought gold and jewellery in the 1980's and 1990's are selling back what they purchased," said Kotaro Horita, who trades precious metals at Mitsubishi Materials in Tokyo. Exports have been increasing to Southeast Asia and China in particular, Horita said.

    Purchases by central banks, which are adding to reserves for the first time in a generation, may reach 450 tonne this year, Marcus Grubb, managing director of investment research at the council, said on November 25. Central banks and government institutions bought 142 tonne last year, IMF data show. "Japan is the only country that exports gold without being a major producer," said Bruce Ikemizu, the manager of Standard Bank's Tokyo branch.

    None of the 7.5 tonne that's extracted annually from the Hishikari Mine in Kagoshima, southern Japan is exported, according to Sumitomo Metal Mining, the country's top nickel producer and the operator of the nation's only operational gold mine.

    Sumitomo spends "several billion yen a day" at peak times to purchase recyclable gold products for shipment to foreign smelters, Koichi Iwanaga, general manager of the commodity business department, said in an interview. Bullion reached a record $1,921.15 an ounce on September 6 and has been profitable to export even after shipping fees because of "the capacities and cost competitiveness of overseas smelters," said Iwanaga.

    "Countries that are buying up gold are places where real interest rates are negative," said Itsuo Toshima, an independent analyst who has researched global markets including gold for about 30 years and was formerly the Japan director of the World Gold Council.

    In China, the biggest gold-jewellery consumer, inflation is eroding the value of bank deposits, prompting investors to seek returns in bullion. Gold makes up 1.6% of China's foreign-currency reserves, compared with the 11% world average, Nicholas Brooks of ETF Securities said on December 2.

    "Central banks are continuing to buy gold exchange-traded funds after concerns arose about the creditworthiness of euro- zone nations," said Koichiro Kamei, managing director at independent research company Market Strategy Institute. Holdings in bullion-backed exchange-traded funds dropped to 2,356.716 on Wednesday from the all-time high of 2,358.206 tonne on December 6, according to Bloomberg data.