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

India's silver and platinum imports from the UAE, previously benefiting from concessionary responsibilities under a trade arrangement, have ceased as New Delhi's move to lower import taxes eliminated the duty arbitrage that bullion dealers were making use of, trade and government officials informed .

The world's second-biggest bullion customer slashed import responsibilities on gold and silver on Tuesday to 6% from 15%.

After the reduction, there is no reward to bring silver or platinum into India under the Comprehensive Economic Collaboration Contract (CEPA) signed in between India and the UAE, stated Prithviraj Kothari, president of the India Bullion and Jewellers Association (IBJA).

Now that routine custom-mades responsibility for silver is lower than the tax under the CEPA, nobody's importing silver any longer.

Bullion dealers primarily imported silver from the UAE under the CEPA, as they just required to pay an 8% import duty compared to the regular 15%.

This assisted the UAE corner nearly half of India's silver imports, with its shipments rising to 1,998 metric lots in the initially five months of 2024 from simply 133 tons during the very same period a year back.

However, with the routine task now reduced to 6%, imports by means of CEPA have actually ended up being impractical, dealerships said.

In the previous two days, bullion dealers have not approached customizeds to clear silver and platinum deliveries under CEPA, stated a federal government official.

The imports of platinum have actually likewise 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 signing up alloys consisting of around 90% gold as platinum to avoid higher duties, sources told .

Around six lots of silver and two tons of platinum alloy have been stranded due to the modification in the responsibility structure, and importers are now facing losses due to the fact that of a sharp drop in global rates, said a Mumbai-based bullion dealer.

Importers need to now either export silver grains back to the UAE or offer them at a discount in the Indian market, the dealership said.

(source: Reuters)