Gold, Silver Prices Dip 2% Despite Israel-Hezbollah Tensions

Gold and silver prices traded lower on the Multi Commodity Exchange (MCX) despite fresh geopolitical tensions from reports of an Israeli attack on Lebanon's Hezbollah. Analysts noted that MCX gold opened with a mild gap-down and is trading in a range, with buying interest emerging at lower levels. For silver, prices found some support from safe-haven demand but remain in a cautious zone with elevated volatility. In international markets, COMEX gold and silver also traded in negative territory, while Brent crude oil futures saw a sharp rise of over 3%.

Key Points: Gold, Silver Trade Lower Despite Geopolitical Tensions

  • Gold futures fell 0.74% on MCX
  • Silver futures plunged 2%
  • Prices fell despite Israel-Hezbollah tensions
  • Analysts cite range-bound trading & cautious tone
  • Brent crude surged over 3%
2 min read

Gold, silver trade up to 2 pc lower despite geopolitical tensions

Gold and silver futures fell up to 2% on MCX despite Middle East tensions. Analysts outline key support and resistance levels for precious metals.

"A sustained move above Rs 1,52,000 could revive momentum towards Rs 1,53,000-Rs 1,55,000. - Analysts"

Mumbai, April 9

Gold and silver prices declined on Thursday despite fresh geopolitical tensions following reports of Israel attacking Lebanon's Hezbollah.

On the Multi Commodity Exchange (MCX), gold futures (June 5) fell as much as 0.74 per cent or Rs 1,129 to Rs 1,50,647, hitting an intraday low at around 10:40 AM. The yellow metal was later trading at Rs 1,51,113, down Rs 663 or 0.44 per cent. It touched an intraday high of Rs 1,51,452.

Meanwhile, silver futures (May 5) also witnessed sharp losses, plunging 2 per cent, or Rs 4,785, to an intraday low of Rs 2,35,133. The white metal touched an intraday high of Rs 2,37,589 and was trading at Rs 2,36,417, down Rs 3,501, or 1.46 per cent.

Market sentiment remained subdued amid uncertainty over the direction of US-Iran ceasefire talks.

Analysts said MCX gold opened with a mild gap-down and is trading in the Rs 1,50,500-Rs 1,51,500 range, with buying interest emerging at lower levels.

"A sustained move above Rs 1,52,000 could revive momentum towards Rs 1,53,000-Rs 1,55,000. However, a decisive break below Rs 1,50,000 may drag prices down to Rs 1,48,000-Rs 1,47,000 levels," they said.

For silver, analysts noted that MCX prices opened with a mild gap-down but found support from safe-haven demand and strength in industrial metals. Prices are hovering around Rs 2,36,000 amid elevated volatility, though the overall tone remains cautious.

"Resistance is placed at Rs 2,40,000-Rs 2,43,000. A breakout could push prices towards Rs 2,45,000-Rs 2,47,000. On the downside, a break below Rs 2,36,000 may accelerate selling towards the Rs 2,33,000-Rs 2,30,000 range," they added.

According to analysts, the bias remains mildly positive, supported by macro factors, although momentum appears tentative and requires confirmation for a sustained uptrend.

In the international market, COMEX gold traded in negative territory, falling over 1 per cent to $4,718.60, while spot gold was nearly flat at $4,718, up 0.04 per cent.

Similarly, COMEX silver declined 3.26 per cent to $72.92, while spot silver was at $73.77, down 0.46 per cent.

Among energy commodities, Brent crude futures were up 3.31 per cent at $97.89 per barrel, while US West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude traded at $98.38, up around 4 per cent from the previous close.

- IANS

Share this article:

Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
As someone tracking commodities, this isn't too surprising. The US-Iran talks and a strong dollar are bigger drivers right now than Middle East headlines. Silver's drop is sharper because its industrial demand is also in focus.
P
Priya S
My mother was planning to buy gold jewellery for Akshaya Tritiya next month. She'll be happy if prices come down a bit more! 🎉 But these daily fluctuations are so confusing for common buyers.
R
Rohit P
The article mentions "mildly positive" bias but the numbers show a clear drop. Feels like analysts are trying to put a positive spin. Just call it what it is – a correction due to profit-booking and shifting investor sentiment.
K
Kavya N
With crude oil shooting up, our import bill will increase. That's more worrying for the rupee and inflation than today's gold price dip. Everything is connected.
V
Vikram M
Good analysis. For retail investors, the key levels mentioned (1,50,000 support, 1,52,000 resistance) are very useful. Volatility is the name of the game now. Better to SIP into gold ETFs rather than time the market.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Leave a Comment

Minimum 50 characters 0/50