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Chinese buyers and seller expect gold rush will continue despite record price

Chinese buyers and seller expect gold rush will continue despite record price
Chinese buyers and seller expect gold rush will continue despite record price

Gold prices have reached new highs in the past week. Customers are rushing into shops that sell the precious metal. Some even bet the price will rise further.

Gold?seller,?Zhao Jinhao, said Tuesday in a Shanghai jewellery mall that gold awareness has been a long-term and upward trend.

It has risen steadily from just under 20 yuan in the 1980s, to over 1,000 yuan today.

Gold prices reached $5,100 an ounce on monday after a surge of 62% in 2025. Central bank purchases to reduce their reliance on the U.S. Dollar and strong demand from buyers looking for a safe haven asset following the turbulent first year of Donald Trump's second presidential term are driving the record-breaking run.

Analysts from Societe Generale stated on Monday that they expected gold to reach $6,000/oz before the end of the year. They said this was a conservative forecast because prices may well rise.

Wang Qiuqin, a Shanghai resident aged 68 years old, appeared to agree. She said the "crazy rise" in prices prompted her to purchase gold at a local store.

If this continues, gold will still go up. "I can accept the current gold price, so I decided to buy some."

Simon Littmann of Swiss Investors Corporation Limited in Hong Kong said that business in January was the best he's ever done in his 20-year career.

He said that this year will be very busy. However, we are having supply issues.

He said that the supply of small bars of gold has been delayed because of high demand. Refineries are also rushing to increase production to meet the needs of retail.

Demand is still affected by higher prices, even though many are not discouraged. China's central banks bought gold each month in the past year. Last year, the wholesale gold demand in China dropped 11% as higher prices and tax reforms weighed down on jewelry demand.

Other people are cashing in on record prices. On Tuesday, dozens of people waited outside the Chong Kee Gold shop in Hong Kong’s central business district to buy and sell gold and silver. Some people had to queue for hours before they could enter the premises. They had their trinkets such as bracelets, necklaces and small statuettes weighed.

It will certainly go higher. "The society is chaotic and unstable right now," said Cherry Tam. She sold some gold jewelry that was given to her at her wedding. "With the economy being so bad, I could get some money back to spend."

Dick Liu (79), a gold craftsman with more than 50-years of experience in the industry, believes that the current uncertain economic climate will continue to fuel a boom in the sector, which he has never seen before.

Gold will continue to rise, Trump, because of the way you are now. It will not fall. He's a crazy man, don't think so? (Reporting and writing by Lewis Jackson, Editing and Hugh Lawson; Additional reporting and writing by Nicoco Chan, Polina Devitt, and Nicoco Chan; Additional reporting and editing by Hugh Lawson; Lewis Jackson, and Polina devitt).

(source: Reuters)