Gold gains 2% as virus fears push Pakistani investors to safe havens

In this file photo, a Pakistani shopkeeper arranges jewelry in the window of a jewelry shop in Islamabad on July 7, 2006. (AFP)
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Updated 15 March 2020
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Gold gains 2% as virus fears push Pakistani investors to safe havens

  • Rates jumped up by Rs2,000 per tola in Pakistan to an all-time high of Rs96,300 on Monday
  • Gold is seen as a safe store of value during times of turmoil, becomes popular when other assets offer low returns

KARACHI: The value of gold was up by more than two percent both in the international and local markets on Monday, traders in Pakistan said, as growing concerns that the coronavirus outbreak could impact the global economy pushed investors toward safe havens.

Gold was trading at $1,685 per ounce (OZ), up by 2.49 percent on Monday afternoon in the international market, while rates jumped by Rs 2,000 per tola (11.66 grams) in Pakistan to an all-time high of Rs96,300.

Global concerns of an economic slowdown stemming from the outbreak of coronavirus have rattled commodity markets and pushed oil and metal prices down. But gold, traditionally seen as a safe store of value during times of turmoil, has become more popular as other assets offer low returns.

“People are moving to hold safe assets after international institutions predicted the impact of coronavirus that is hampering global economies,” CEO of Arif Habib Commodities, Ahsan Mehanti, told Arab News. “People are selling currency to buy gold because when global growth weakens they invest in safe assets and that is gold generally.”

A Reuters poll in January said gold prices would hold above $1,500 an ounce this year and make modest gains in 2021 as low-interest rates and geopolitical uncertainty bolstered its appeal.

“Gold has re-established its safe-haven status,” Standard Chartered analyst Suki Cooper told Reuters last month. “We expect gold to test seven-year highs in 2020.”

The trend, Pakistani analysts say, shows that gold prices will continue to climb toward $1,700 an ounce.

“Prices have risen even above the reach of average investors. In the wedding season, the demand for gold spikes but now business is down to around 20 percent,” said Hajji Haroon Chand, president of the All Sindh Saraf Jewellers Association. “Only rich investors are buying gold now because at Rs 96,300 per tola, it is beyond the purchasing power of small investors,” Chand added.

On Monday, energy prices tumbled by more than three percent as brent crude traded at $55.87 per barrel while US WTI crude was down 3.58 percent to $51.47 in afternoon trade according to Pakistan Standard Time.

Pakistan’s equity market also closed down by 1105 points or 2.75 percent on Monday as coronavirus triggered sell-off.

“The market is down because investors fear that coronavirus from Iran may affect Pakistan also,” Muhammad Sohail, CEO of Topline Securities, said. “Global markets are down as virus cases rise.”

Iran, which borders Pakistan, said on Monday that the outbreak had killed at least 12 people, the largest number of coronavirus-linked deaths outside China.
 


Pakistan to sign preferential trade agreement with Russia during Sharif’s upcoming visit — envoy

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Pakistan to sign preferential trade agreement with Russia during Sharif’s upcoming visit — envoy

  • Pakistan Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif plans to visit ‌Russia ​on ‌March ⁠3-5, ​Russian state news ⁠agency RIA reported this month
  • Islamabad will also organize Russia-Pakistan Business Forum, which will have participation from more than 100 Pakistani firms

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan is seeking to sign a preferential trade agreement (PTA) with Russia to boost bilateral trade volume during Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s upcoming visit to Moscow, Pakistan’s ambassador to Moscow has said.

Pakistani Ambassador Faisal Niaz Tirmizi said this during the Moscow-Islamabad media forum, which was hosted by Sputnik ahead of Sharif’s scheduled visit to Moscow next month.

Pakistan and Russia, once Cold War rivals, have strengthened ties in recent years. In 2023, Islamabad began purchasing discounted Russian crude oil banned from European markets over Ukraine war, and also received first shipment of liquefied petroleum gas from Moscow.

The volume of Russia-Pakistan trade rose more than 100 percent to $1.81 billion from July 2023 till June 2024, though it experienced slight contraction in the last fiscal year, according to officials.

“Once the prime minister is here, we will start the process of signing PTA with the Eurasian Economic Union and the Russian Federation,” Tirmizi said at the forum.

Pakistan and Russia are members of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO), a Eurasian political, economic and security organization, and have had sustained high-level interactions and institutional mechanisms in recent years.

PM Sharif plans to visit ‌Russia ​on ‌March ⁠3-5, ​Russian state news ⁠agency RIA reported this month, citing ⁠a ‌Pakistani ‌official.

Tirmizi said Russia-Pakistan ties were not only strategic or bilateral, but they had commercial, people-to-people and business dimensions as well.

“I am very happy to announce that Pakistan is also organizing the second Russia-Pakistan Business Forum during this visit,” he said.

“Over a hundred companies, hundred leading companies are coming from Pakistan to interact with the Russian partners.”