Tuesday 20 August 2013

Economic Effects of the Consumers' Attraction towards Gold

History:
Gold has traditionally been used as a monetary exchange mechanism in most countries, however, by the 1930s, most countries left gold standard. The USA was the last country to issue gold coins in 1932. Recently, Switzerland which had tied its currency to gold reserve finally gave up when it joined IMF (International Monetary Fund) in 1999.

Consumption:
The current global consumption of new gold production is 50% in jewellery (including art work and other consumer products), 40% in investments and 10% in industries. India ranks Number One consumer of gold - a massive 25% of the world’s gold production (approx. 800 tonnes a year). India’s consumption is expected to increase to 965 tonnes this year. Approximately, 50% of India’s gold consumption is imported every year (approx. 400-450 tonnes a year).  Indian consumers hold approx. 18,000 tonnes of gold.

Gold culture:
The primary reason that the consumer demand for gold in India constantly increasing can be partly attributed to our culture – we use gold as a reward for everything right from birth, first birthday, success in school performance to wedding etc. It is a status symbol to display the amount of gold one has to command respect in the society in direct contrast to the western society.

Economic Impact:
Some of the economic impact of our excessive attraction to gold: 
1. One of the reasons for Indian Rupee depreciation in the recent periods (Rupee is at all-time low against USD, GBP and most other major currencies - above Rs 63/USD, above RS 99/GBP).

2. In March 2013, the Current Account Deficit hit a record high of 4.8% due primarily to substantial increase in the import of oil and gold.

3. Growth rate is falling faster than ever.  In the last 5 out of 8 years, India's growth rate (GDP) was at around 8.5% which has now fallen to mere 5% and there is no sign of improvement growth in the near future. Partly because the increased import of gold is not being used for increasing India’s growth instead stored away idle in consumer’s domestic locker. Consumer holding such large quantities of gold does not create growth in the economy.

4. Corruption.  Yes gold plays a significant role in corruption. If you look at history and analyse why most western countries exited gold in the 1930s, it is partly because of corruption. Controlling corruption in gold is difficult to manage (and it is a completely different topic to discuss).  Most corrupt people hold substantial amount of their corrupt wealth in gold.

5. Lack of willingness to effectively implement a number of existing anti-corruption measures, tax laws and other legislative measures provide opportunities for the corrupt to hide their undeclared wealth in gold.

6. Gold is also one of the root causes for some of the social problems like dowry in rural India.

Artificial Price Hike:
As India is the largest consumer of gold, the global gold producers and traders even artificially increase the gold price during Indian festive seasons like Diwali, wedding seasons etc – as the demand exceeds the supply.

Whether Gold is the safest asset? 
Even though, people think that gold is the safest asset, it is not. Gold is like any other material asset that can be stolen or lost. The value can go down as well as up. It is as volatile to market conditions as any other investment.


CA. Simarpreet Singh Gulati
+91 9890495659

Saturday 10 August 2013

HIGHLIGHTS OF THE NEW COMPANIES BILL

The upper house of the Parliament passed the Companies Bill on August 8, 2013 after much delay. The bill replaces Companies Act, 1956, and had been passed by the Lok Sabha in December last year. Key highlights of the new Companies Bill are as under:

1. Incorporation of a One Person Company has been permitted.
2. Numbers of permissible members in private company has been raised to 200 as against existing limit of 50 members.
3. Listed companies shall have at least 1/3 rd of the total number of directors as Independent Directors and the Central Government may prescribe the minimum number of Independent Directors for any class of public companies.
4. Nominee director cannot be regarded as Independent Director.
5. Maximum term of Independent Director has been restricted to five years at once subject to a maximum of two such terms.
6. Appointment of at least one woman director on the board of prescribed classes of companies has been made mandatory.
7. Appointment of at least one director resident in India, i.e. a director who has stayed in India for at least 182 days in the previous calendar year, is made mandatory for all companies.
8. Maximum number of directors has been increased from twelve (12) to fifteen (15) directors, Further no Central Government approval is required to increase the maximum no. of directors beyond fifteen(15). Shareholders of companies may do so by passing a special resolution.
9. A person can hold directorship of up to 20 companies, of which not more than 10 can be public companies.
10. No listed companies shall appoint-
i. an individual as auditor for more than one term of five consecutive years, and
ii. an audit firm as auditor for more than two terms of five consecutive years.
11. Shareholders are at liberty to decide by passing resolution that audit partner and the audit team, be rotated every year.
12. CSR has been made mandatory for a company having net worth of Rs. 500 crore or more, or turnover of Rs.1,000 crore or more or net profit of Rs. 5 crore or more during any financial year. Under the new bill, companies are required to spend at least 2 per cent of their average net profits for the three immediately preceeding financial years on CSR
13. The new bill bans holding ‘Treasury Stock’, which is often used by companies to increase shareholding or future monetisation after consolidation.
14. Financial Year of any company can end only on March 31 and only exception is for companies, which are holding / subsidiary of a foreign entity requiring consolidation outside India, can have a different financial year with the approval of Tribunal.

CA. Simarpreet Singh Gulati
simarpreetgulati@gmail.com
+91 9890495659