Precious Metal: Gold Slips 1.1% on MCX as $95 Oil and Strong Dollar Erase Safe-Haven Gains
Gold prices on MCX fell 1.1% to ₹1,52,985 on Monday morning as a surging US Dollar and $95 oil dampened bullion's appeal. Despite escalating US-Iran naval tensions, higher inflation expectations from rising energy costs are cooling bets on interest rate cuts, pressuring precious metals.
Precious metals reversed on Monday morning, with gold and silver prices retreating from recent highs. Despite intensifying geopolitical conflict in the Middle East, a "toxic mix" of a surging US Dollar and skyrocketing oil prices has forced bullion investors to lock in profits.
As of 11:57 AM IST, Gold June futures on the MCX were trading at ₹1,52,985 per 10 grams, down nearly 1.1% or ₹1,624 from the previous close. Silver followed, with MCX Silver May futures trading near ₹2,50,001 per kg. It's struggling to maintain its psychological support levels.
Why the Safe-Haven Rally Stalled
The seizure of an Iranian vessel by US forces would trigger a massive flight to safety. However, the move has been neutralized by two factors:
- Dollar Strength: The US Dollar Index has climbed to 98.47, making gold more expensive for holders of other currencies.
- The Oil-Inflation Trap: With Brent crude surging over 5% to $95.53, inflation expectations are spiking. This reduces the likelihood of immediate interest rate cuts by the Federal Reserve, increasing the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding assets like gold.
The price drop also comes as physical demand in India remains muted. Following a weekend of subdued festival buying, jewelers report that record-high prices have effectively priced out the retail consumer.
Technical Levels to Watch
Technically, gold is finding interim support near the ₹1,52,500 mark. A breach below this could trigger further selling toward the ₹1,51,800 zone. For silver, the ₹2,48,000 level remains a critical floor. Traders are now closely monitoring the US negotiators' trip to Islamabad; any sign of a diplomatic breakthrough could further ease the geopolitical risk premium, while a failure in talks could reignite a sudden safe-haven bid.
Published By : Shourya Jha
Published On: 20 April 2026 at 12:18 IST