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Monday, January 30, 2012
Spring Festival sparks a 'gold rush' in China
The China Daily reports a 50% increase in gold sales at stores during Chinese New Year this year.
"People seem crazy about gold , snatching it up more like a 'cheap cabbage ' than such a precious metal ,"..
BEIJING - A "gold rush " swept through China during the week-long Lunar New Year holiday this year , with demand for precious metals and jewelry surging since the Year of the Dragon began .
Sales of gold , silver and jewelry rose 57.6 percent during the week-long holiday at Caibai , one of Beijing 's best-known gold retailers , according to data released by the Ministry of Commerce (MOC ) on Saturday .
Other jewelry stores across the country also saw sales boom during the period , with customers favoring New Year-themed gold bars , gold ingots and other types of Dragon-themed jewelries .
"Long treasured by Chinese , gold is no longer owned only by a privileged few , but has become a new investment channel open to all ," said Guan Qiang , assistant manager at Caibai .
The Spring Festival gives people a chance to preserve and present gold as gifts , offering hopes that it will increase in value and not be impacted by inflation , Guan said .
During the week-long holiday , which lasted from January 22 to 28, the sales volume in Caibai and Guohua , another of Beijing 's top gold retailers , reached about 600 million yuan ($95.28million ).
The figure showed a 49.7-percent increase over that of last year 's Spring Festival , said a report released by the Beijing Municipal Commission of Commerce .
Caibai began selling gold bars as investment items during the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games , but the trend of buying gold or silver bars during the Spring Festival has really taken off in the past two years , Guan said .
For Guan and his colleagues , the Spring Festival rush was an exciting but exhausting experience , as customers flooded the store and surprised clerks with their purchasing enthusiasm .
"With customers crowding and rushing in , we did not even have time to eat and drink ," said a sales clerk at the gold bar counter surnamed Li .
She said each shop assistant had received hundreds of customers per day and wrote several times more orders than on ordinary days .
"You can hardly even see the gold bars , necklaces and pendants in the display case . People seem crazy about gold , snatching it up more like a 'cheap cabbage ' than such a precious metal ," said Beijing resident Miao Miao .
"You have to quickly decide whether to make a purchase , or it will be taken away by others ."
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