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RTRS: India gold traders continue picking up bargains
 
MUMBAI (Reuters) - India gold traders continued to pick up bargains on Monday as a firm rupee made the dollar-quoted yellow metal cheaper, and prices stayed below the keenly-watched 17,000-rupees mark, dealers said.

"We have been doing good business in the last couple of sessions... we filled few orders at $1,097-1,098 (an ounce) on Friday and today at $1,100-1,103," said a dealer with a private bank in Mumbai.

The Indian rupee rose to its highest in a month on Monday, tracking strong regional currencies and as foreign banks bought the local currency to arbitrage in the offshore non-deliverable forwards (NDF) market.

International spot gold traded at $1,110.70/1,111.50 an ounce as against 1,096.35/1,098.35 in the previous session, while gold February contract was trading at 16,742 rupees at 2:44 p.m.

"We have advanced orders placed at around $1,080 and people are buying outright," said another dealer with a private bank.

Traders said gold sales rebounded in December as easing prices prompted buyers to stock up for wedding demand.

"We saw good business in the month of December, gold below 17,000 rupees is always an attractive price for traders," said the private bank dealer.

India's gold imports in December jumped to 32-35 tonnes provisionally from 3 tonnes a year ago, the head of Bombay Bullion Association (BBA) said on Jan 1.

Source