The move, which brings the number of firms allowed to import gold into China to 15, comes ahead of the launch in September of a new international bullion exchange in Shanghai with which China hopes to become a price-discovery centre.

China and other Asian gold trading centres such as Singapore are calling for more localised pricing of the precious metal as they seek alternatives to the so-called London fix, the global benchmark for spot gold prices, which is being investigated by regulators on suspicion that it may have been manipulated.

Standard Chartered (>> Standard Chartered PLC), Shanghai Pudong Development Bank (>> Shanghai Pudong Development Bank Co. Ltd) and China Merchants Bank (>> China Merchants Bank Co., Ltd) were given regulatory approval recently to import gold, five sources with direct knowledge of the matter told Reuters.

"We were given the license earlier this month. We haven't started importing yet but we will soon," said a source at one of the three banks, speaking on condition of anonymity as the news has not yet been publicly announced.

Standard Chartered, only the third foreign bank to be allowed to import gold into China, declined to comment. The other two banks did not immediately reply to requests for comment.

Trading data from the Shanghai Gold Exchange (SGE) - the platform for all physical trades in China - show Shanghai Pudong Development Bank was ranked among the top 10 trading members every month from January to July, while China Merchants was among the top 10 for five out of seven months.

"We are active traders on the SGE and have been waiting for the gold import license for more than a year now," said a source at China Merchants Bank.

Allowing more banks to import is a sign of willingness by regulators to open up the market, especially to foreign firms, but the move does not necessarily mean import volumes into China would increase significantly in the near term given current weak demand.

China has increased the pace of liberalisation of the gold market over the past year, with the approval last year of the country's first gold-backed exchange-traded funds, extended trading hours and the granting of import licenses to foreign players.

ANZ (>> Australia and New Zealand Banking Group) and HSBC (>> HSBC Holdings plc) were granted import licenses late last year.

PRICE-DISCOVERY CENTRE

China approached foreign banks, gold producers and refiners to participate in SGE's international bourse, sources told Reuters earlier in the year, to boost its position as a price-discovery centre for gold. It plans to launch three physically-backed gold contracts.

The chairman of the exchange said in June that China should have its own pricing benchmark as it is the biggest consumer and producer of gold.

"The new import licenses seem to be well-timed. Along with their upcoming new exchange, they are clearly showing that they want to make the market more accessible, and easier for foreign players," said one precious metals trader in Hong Kong.

However, the granting of the new licenses would not mean China's gold imports would surge as buyers have taken a pause after record consumption last year. Total gold demand halved in the second-quarter, according to the World Gold Council.

China imported over 1,000 tonnes of gold last year as gold prices slumped after a 12-year rally.

(Editing by Muralikumar Anantharaman)

By A. Ananthalakshmi and Fayen Wong