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India's duty cut halts concessionary silver, platinum imports from UAE

A reduction in import taxes means there is no incentive to bring silver or platinum into India under a trade agreement signed between New Delhi and the UAE.
2 min read
India slashed import duties on gold and silver on Tuesday to six percent from 15 percent [270770/Getty-file photo]

India's silver and platinum imports from the UAE, previously benefiting from concessionary duties under a trade agreement, have ceased as New Delhi's move to reduce import taxes eliminated the duty arbitrage that bullion dealers were exploiting, trade and government officials told Reuters.

The world's second-biggest bullion consumer slashed import duties on gold and silver on Tuesday to six percent from 15 percent.

After the reduction, there is no incentive to bring silver or platinum into India under the Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (CEPA) signed between India and the UAE, said Prithviraj Kothari, president of the India Bullion and Jewellers Association (IBJA).

"Now that regular customs duty for silver is lower than the tax under the CEPA, nobody's importing silver anymore."

Bullion dealers primarily imported silver from the UAE under the CEPA, as they only needed to pay an eight percent import duty compared to the regular 15 percent.

This helped the UAE corner nearly half of India's silver imports, with its shipments surging to 1,998 metric tons in the first five months of 2024 from just 133 tons during the same period a year ago.

However, with the regular duty now reduced to six percent, imports via CEPA have become unfeasible, dealers said.

In the past two days, bullion dealers have not approached customs to clear silver and platinum shipments under CEPA, said a government official.

The imports of platinum have also stopped because of the duty cut, said Nitin Kedia, national general secretary at the All India Jewellers and Goldsmith Federation.

India's four-week platinum imports from mid June eclipsed 2023's total as bullion dealers exploited a loophole by registering alloys containing around 90 percent gold as platinum to avoid higher duties, sources told Reuters.

Around six tons of silver and two tons of platinum alloy have been stranded due to the change in the duty structure, and importers are now facing losses because of a sharp drop in global prices, said a Mumbai-based bullion dealer.

"Importers must now either export silver grains back to the UAE or sell them at a discount in the Indian market," the dealer said.

(Reuters)

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