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Silver demand in India eases and premiums drop after the festive surge

Bullion dealers in India reported that silver premiums have dropped sharply since the festive rush of two weeks ago, as demand has dwindled. Potential buyers are delaying purchases.

In the first half of this month, silver premiums in China, the world's biggest consumer, rose as much as 10% above official domestic prices due to strong demand. This forced some exchange-traded funds with physical backing to temporarily suspend subscriptions.

The rush to purchase silver has ended. The demand has slowed and premiums are back to normal," said Chirag Thakkar, Amrapali Group Gujarat's chief executive.

Buyers Turn Wary

Dealers said that the premium on silver over official domestic prices has dropped to between 25 and 40 cents an ounce from $5 per ounce earlier in the month.

Indians celebrated the Dhanteras (Diwali) and Diwali (Dhanteras) festivals earlier this year. Buying gold and silver during these days is considered auspicious, and it's one of the busiest days for bullion purchases in the country.

A Mumbai-based dealer of bullion with a private banking firm said that during the price rally investors were eager to buy silver and often paid higher premiums than normal.

The recent price correction has altered the mood. The dealer stated that investors are waiting until prices settle before they make purchases.

After hitting a high of 170.415 rupees a kilogram earlier in the month, domestic silver prices have now corrected to 147,000 rupees. Silver prices are up 68% this year.

The price surge in September saw a record 53,42 billion rupees poured into silver ETFs. India's imports of silver from August increased by more than double to 1,012 tons.

A fund manager who declined to give his name said that although silver was scarce in the local market during the second week of the month, supplies have now increased.

He said that flows into silver ETFs had also slowed in the last few days.

In the first half of this month, a rising Indian demand increased silver lease rates in London, which is the cost to borrow physical silver.

(source: Reuters)