Gold, Silver Prices Slip on Strong Dollar, Profit Booking

Gold and silver prices fell in trading, with silver dropping over 3% due to a stronger US dollar and profit booking. The dollar's strength, poised for its best week since November, made dollar-denominated metals more expensive for other currencies. Analysts view the drop as a healthy technical correction, with long-term drivers like geopolitical uncertainty and central bank buying still supportive. They advise staggered investments and note key support and resistance levels for both metals.

Key Points: Gold, Silver Prices Fall Amid Dollar Strength, Profit Booking

  • Gold futures fell nearly 1%
  • Silver plunged over 3%
  • Stronger dollar pressures commodities
  • Analysts call it a technical correction
  • Long-term fundamentals remain constructive
2 min read

Gold, silver prices slip amid profit booking, dollar gains

Gold and silver prices decline as the dollar strengthens and tech stocks fall. Analysts see a technical correction, not a trend reversal.

"Silver's rich valuations could trigger disproportionate downside during bouts of market stress - JP Morgan"

Mumbai, Feb 6

Gold prices fell moderately, while silver lost over 3 per cent on Friday due to a stronger dollar and a rout in global technology stocks.

MCX gold February futures fell 0.97 per cent to Rs 1,50,590 per 10 grams around 10.40 am on an intraday basis. Meanwhile, MCX silver March futures plunged 3.71 per cent to Rs 2,34,775 per kg.

On the MCX, silver prices had declined as much as 6 per cent to their day's low of Rs 2,29,187 per kg earlier during the session before a strong rebound.

Commodities denominated in dollars became more expensive for holders of other currencies as the US dollar got poised for its strongest weekly performance since November, hovering close to a two-week high.

Silver's sharp correction has reignited concerns over stretched valuations and heightened volatility, even as analysts maintained that the white metal's longer-term fundamentals remain constructive.

Investment banker JP Morgan warned that silver's rich valuations could trigger disproportionate downside during bouts of market stress, adding that downside may be cushioned in the near term, with prices stabilising for a recovery next year.

Analysts called the sharp drop in precious metals a "technical correction" due to longer-term drivers such as geopolitical uncertainty, central-bank buying, and macro uncertainty remaining intact.

The broader uptrend in COMEX gold remains intact, with the recent decline reflecting profit booking and healthy price digestion rather than trend reversal, they said.

Market watchers advised investors to do staggered allocations rather than lump-sum investments to reduce entry risk.

Strong support is seen in the Rs 1,37,000 to Rs 1,42,000 zone for MCX gold futures, while resistance is anchored around the Rs 1,65,000 to Rs 1,75,000 zone, they said.

Regarding COMEX silver, they said that a sustained move beyond $85-$92 could lead to an upside momentum up to $95-$105, with the medium- to long-term outlook remaining constructive on steady industrial demand and structural supply constraints.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Silver down 3.7% is a big move! Shows how volatile it can be compared to gold. My father always said invest in gold for safety, silver for speculation. Seems he was right.
A
Aditya G
The advice for staggered allocation is very sensible. Many middle-class Indians put their life savings into gold at once. SIP style investment in SGBs or ETFs is much safer.
S
Sarah B
Interesting analysis. The dollar strength is a key factor often overlooked. For a country like India with a large trade deficit, a strong dollar makes all imports, including gold, more expensive. This dip might be temporary.
K
Karthik V
While the article is informative, it focuses heavily on futures and COMEX. What about the physical market in India? The price difference between MCX and your local jeweller is a story in itself. That's where most Indians actually buy.
M
Meera T
Silver at nearly ₹2.35 lakh per kg! I remember when it was half that. The industrial demand story is strong, but such high prices hurt small artisans and karigars in places like Jaipur and Cuttack who rely on it.

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