Gold Slips on Strong Dollar, Silver Rebounds; Rupee Hits Record Low

Gold prices in India traded slightly lower on the Multi Commodity Exchange (MCX), pressured by a strong US dollar and reduced expectations for near-term US rate cuts. Silver futures, however, rebounded from early losses to trade nearly 1% higher, showing strength on buying interest at lower levels. Concurrently, the Indian rupee depreciated 0.3% to hit a fresh record low against the US dollar, driven by rising crude oil prices and dollar strength. Analysts note that gold's medium-term bullish outlook remains intact as long as it holds above a key demand zone.

Key Points: Gold Prices Dip, Silver Gains on MCX; Rupee at Record Low

  • Gold futures slip 0.08% on MCX
  • Silver rebounds nearly 1% from lows
  • Strong US dollar pressures bullion
  • Indian rupee hits fresh record low
2 min read

Gold slips on strong dollar, silver rebounds on MCX; Rupee hits record low

Gold futures slip on MCX amid a strong US dollar, while silver rebounds. The Indian rupee hits a fresh record low against the dollar.

"As long as prices hold above this base, the medium-term bullish outlook remains intact. - Analyst"

Mumbai, March 12

Gold prices in India traded slightly lower on Thursday, even as silver prices recovered from early losses and moved higher due to strong buying at lower levels.

On the Multi Commodity Exchange (MCX), gold for April futures was trading at Rs 1,61,665 per 10 grams, down by Rs 124 or 0.08 percent.

The precious metal had opened higher at Rs 1,62,799 per 10 grams compared with its previous close of Rs 1,61,789, but later pared its gains amid weak global cues.

Experts said that strong buying interest remains visible in the Rs 1,56,000-Rs 1,57,000 demand zone.

"As long as prices hold above this base, the medium-term bullish outlook remains intact. A sustained breakout above Rs 1,65,000 could revive bullish momentum toward Rs 1,75,000-Rs 1,80,000," an analyst stated.

Silver prices, however, showed strength during the session. MCX silver for May futures rebounded after initial losses and was trading at Rs 2,71,065 per kilogram, up by Rs 2,574 or 0.96 per cent.

The contract had opened at Rs 2,69,212 per kilogram, slightly higher than its previous close of Rs 2,68,491.

The decline in gold prices came as international bullion markets remained under pressure due to a stronger US dollar and reduced expectations of interest rate cuts in the near term.

A stronger dollar makes dollar-denominated commodities like gold more expensive for investors holding other currencies, which typically weighs on demand.

In global markets, spot gold slipped 0.2 percent to $5,165.73 per ounce, while US gold futures for April delivery fell 0.2 percent to $5,171.40 per ounce. Spot silver was largely steady at $85.82 per ounce.

Meanwhile, the Indian rupee hit a fresh record low on Thursday amid a sharp rise in crude oil prices and continued strength in the US dollar.

The local currency declined 0.3 percent to 92.3575 against the dollar, surpassing its previous lifetime low of 92.3475 recorded earlier this week.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
The rupee hitting a new record low is the real story here. It makes everything imported more expensive, not just gold. This impacts the common man's budget far more directly. The government needs to address this structural issue.
A
Aditya G
Expert says "medium-term bullish outlook remains intact" but also mentions weak global cues. Feels a bit contradictory for the average investor. Can we get clearer advice? For now, I'm holding my SIP in gold ETFs.
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Priyanka N
Silver rebound is interesting. With push for solar and electronics, industrial demand might keep it steady. Maybe better for trading than gold right now? Gold seems stuck between dollar strength and wedding season demand.
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Karthik V
Strong dollar, high oil prices, weak rupee... a classic triple whammy for our economy. Gold is just the indicator. The focus should be on boosting exports to improve the rupee's position. Jai Hind!
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Meera T
My mother always says, "Gold never lets you down." A small correction doesn't matter for long-term holders like us. We buy for security and tradition, not daily price movements. 🪙

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