logo
Gold skyrockets to Rs314,000/ tola

Gold skyrockets to Rs314,000/ tola

Express Tribune14-03-2025

Listen to article
Gold prices in Pakistan soared to a new record high on Friday after surpassing the psychological milestone of $3,000 in international markets. In the local market, the price of gold per tola surged by Rs4,700 in a single day, reaching Rs314,000.
According to the All-Pakistan Gems and Jewellers Sarafa Association (APGJSA), the price of 10-gram gold climbed by Rs4,030, settling at Rs269,204.
A day earlier, on Thursday, gold prices had already risen by Rs2,800 per tola.
"Gold has officially surpassed the significant milestone of $3,000 per ounce, marking a new all-time high," said Adnan Agar, Director of Interactive Commodities.
Gold pierced through the psychological milestone of $3,000 an ounce on Friday for the first time, building on a historic rally as trade tensions and US rate cut bets supercharged its appeal as a safe store of value.
Spot gold rose 0.1% to $2,991.00 an ounce at 1342 GMT after hitting an all-time high of $3,004.86.
US gold futures were up 0.4% to $3,002.30.
JS Global wrote in a report that gold reached an all-time high on Friday, driven by uncertainty over US tariffs, trade tensions, and growing expectations of monetary policy easing by the Federal Reserve.
"At present, a global trade war is underway, fuelling prices to jump to new highs," said Mohammad Qasim Shikarpuri, President of APGJSA. The conflict between Russia and Ukraine, as well as the war in Gaza, have not reached any resolution despite significant efforts for a ceasefire.
Meanwhile, in the United States, there has been a surge in gold purchases following statements by President Trump indicating that he would focus on gold reserves, he added. This increased demand has driven gold prices to record highs, both internationally and in Pakistan.
"Currently, gold is at an all-time peak in both global and domestic markets," he said. "Given the ongoing geopolitical tensions and economic uncertainty, the trend suggests that gold prices may continue to rise."
"Looking ahead, the situation does not appear to be improving, and further increases in gold prices seem likely," said the APGJSA president.
Gold, traditionally viewed as a safe-haven investment during times of inflation or economic volatility, has risen over 14% so far this year, driven in part by concerns over the impact of US President Trump's tariffs and the recent selloff in stock markets.
The global trade war that has roiled financial markets and raised recession fears is escalating, with Trump on Thursday threatening to slap a 200% tariff on alcohol imports from Europe.
"The market remains highly active and volatile, with strong bullish momentum," said Adnan Agar, Director of Gold Commodities Limited. "Given the current trends and global economic conditions, it is expected that gold prices may continue their upward trajectory, potentially reaching around $3,025 to $3,040 per ounce."
However, once it touches these levels, some profit-taking is likely to occur, leading to a temporary pullback, he said. This is a natural market response as investors look to capitalise on their gains before the next potential movement in gold prices.
"Amid escalating geopolitical tensions, rising trade tariffs, and growing financial market uncertainty, investors are increasingly seeking stability – and they are finding it in gold," said Alexander Zumpfe, a precious metals trader at Heraeus Metals Germany.
"For now, strong physical demand and safe-haven buying suggest that gold's upward momentum is not yet exhausted."
A combination of strong central bank purchases, sound investment demand, as well as bets on monetary policy easing by the US Federal Reserve, have also bolstered zero-yield bullion's performance this year. The Fed is widely expected to keep its benchmark overnight interest rate unchanged at its meeting on Wednesday.
"Overall, we maintain our $3,300 call for the year," said Ole Hansen, Head of Commodity Strategy at Saxo Bank, adding that a close above $3,000 on Friday could signal a continuation of the rally next week. ANZ, in a note, forecasted gold to hit $3,050 in 2025.
Meanwhile, silver added 0.2% to $33.87 an ounce, platinum lost 0.7% to $987.30, and palladium gained 0.6% to $963.78.
On the other hand, the Pakistani rupee experienced a slight dip against the US dollar, depreciating by 0.06% in the inter-bank market on Friday. By the end of the trading session, the currency stood at 280.21, marking a decline of 16 paisa against the dollar.
A day earlier, on Thursday, the rupee had closed at 280.05.
Globally, the US dollar remained strong on Friday, while the euro retreated further from its five-month high.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Twilight of the Empire
Twilight of the Empire

Express Tribune

time3 hours ago

  • Express Tribune

Twilight of the Empire

US President Donald Trump gestures, as he departs for Pennsylvania, on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington, DC, U.S., May 30, 2025. Photo: Reuters Listen to article As a series of trends and shocks cumulatively strain the old order, US President Donald Trump, even his critics must admit, possesses the fatal gift of locating the aching pulse of the nation, only to inflame it further with self-destructive measures while eroding Washington's global credibility. He sees the symptoms of American decline clearly: deindustrialisation, a brittle middle class, bloated trade deficits, and the political cost of endless wars. But he metabolises crisis into spectacle, grievance into doctrine, and interdependence into betrayal. For decades, the US has functioned as the imperial core of a global capital-recycling apparatus. The system has depended on the continuous inflow of surplus capital from export-heavy economies, including China and Germany, to America's debt-saturated financial architecture. The US trade deficit reached an eye-watering $1.1 trillion in 2023, a figure that dwarfs those of other peripheral or semi-peripheral economies like India. In this light, Trump's populist howl against the 'indignity' of the American people, dispossessed in the very belly of global wealth, is not entirely misplaced. His instinct that endless wars serve as spectacles to obscure the real mechanism of American hegemony – the global dollar-debt regime – is accurate in a crude, pre-theoretical sense. Since the late 1960s, when America ceased being a surplus nation, its geopolitical muscle has rested not on production but on its control of the dollar as the global reserve currency. The military-industrial complex is merely the theatrical wing of a deeper financial imperialism. However, Trump is radically mistaken in his belief that punitive tariffs and protectionist swagger will resurrect 'Middle America.' Tariffs, in the late neoliberal stage, cannot revive industrial capacity gutted by decades of offshoring and rentier capitalism. Instead, they risk destabilising the very mechanism whereby America's status as a debtor empire is transformed into an asset: the recycling of dollar-denominated debt into US capital markets. If that circuit is broken, the paper wealth of Wall Street and the speculative empires of Trump's own class will collapse. To materially uplift the working and lower-middle classes that fuelled his electoral resurgence, Trump would have to declare war not on China or Brussels, but on Manhattan and Malibu, hedge funds, private equity, and speculative real estate. 'Asymmetric interdependence' For much of the post-World War II period, what was marketed as 'globalisation' was, in fact, an imperial project cloaked in liberal universals. It was the projection of American state-capitalist hegemony through a scaffold of multilateral institutions – the IMF, World Bank, WTO, NATO – and the sacrosanct status of the dollar as the planetary currency-signifier. These were not neutral frameworks but instruments of asymmetric interdependence: the United States exported capital, debt, and ideology, while importing dependence, discipline, and surplus labour from the periphery and semi-periphery. The so-called "Washington Consensus" was never a consensus but a diktat. The system also functioned through a deeper ideological fantasy that free markets and global rule-based order were apolitical, universal, and benign. However, even most liberal-internationalist critiques warn the fantasy is fraying. The very interdependence that sustained US primacy is in retreat. Firms and governments worldwide need American consumers, capital markets, and alliances, giving Washington soft coercive power. Trump's tactics have upended that balance. By 'assailing interdependence,' the administration is chipping away at the very basis of American advantage. Robert Keohane and Joseph Nye argue that order depends on stable power balances, shared norms, and sustaining institutions. Trump has shaken all three. What follows is a deeper drift into disorder, one that won't resolve until Washington either reorients itself or is overtaken by a new dispensation. The plunge may already be underway. 'In his erratic and misguided effort to make the United States even more powerful, Trump may bring its period of dominance—what the American publisher Henry Luce first called 'the American century'—to an unceremonious end,' they write in a Foreign Affairs essay. The weaponisation of the global economy hollows out the very symbolic order the US once used to legitimate its rule. By shrinking its adversaries' strategic space, Washington also corrodes the interconnected lattice that once lent credibility and allure to its empire. A tariff here, a blacklist there, and the freezing of foreign bank reserves – each may win tactical advantage, but at the cost of eroding the trust that underpinned the liberal international order. After all, what merchant or government would dare anchor long-term plans to a system where every node can be severed by a presidential signature? Trump's disruption is risky for the US precisely because new economic blocs are emerging from the wreckage of Western hegemony. Many leaders of the Global South remember colonialism and feel the 21st century liberates them from Western diktats. Where the US once posed as the sole path to progress, China's tech power and Russia's security reach now appear less like threats and more like counterweights. On soft power's front, when natural disasters strike or epidemics spread, Western-style NGOs and media have lost some of their framing power, as Chinese and Russian aid convoys now appear on television alongside those from the Red Cross. The velvet-glove diplomacy of the Cold War years – teddy bears over bombers – has been largely replaced by quarantine diplomacy, vaccine pledges, and once-dominant American development agencies playing second fiddle to Belt-and-Road contracts. In May, a major Democracy Perception Index reported that majorities of people worldwide now see the US negatively. The pollster noted that after Trump's return to the White House, America's reputation 'took a particularly massive hit in EU countries' and fell sharply everywhere. Even NATO founder Anders Fogh Rasmussen sighed that the US' standing was 'unloved' across most of the world. By contrast, China's image is improving globally, even overtaking the US in overall favourability in most regions. At home, the US is cannibalising its future. Budget cuts to core research agencies like the NSF and NIH are hollowing out the very ecosystem that once drove American innovation. Labs shrink, fellowships vanish, and global talent turns to Beijing, Singapore, or the UAE – where funding flows and visas follow. Meanwhile, China invests aggressively in semiconductors, AI, and green tech, eroding the US edge. As Oxford's Carl Benedikt Frey puts it, Trump's agenda risks dismantling the pillars of US innovation. Technological leadership is not a birthright but is built. And Washington is letting it rot. Trump's move to turn tariff-penalties and export bans into blunt instruments has worried many that he was abandoning existing rules and undermining the soft power that Washington has spent decades building. Analysts argue that American power rests on a blend of hard force and attraction, even though this very soft power has enabled hard power interventions. Interdependence with trading partners and multilateral institutions generates US leverage, while global admiration for 'American culture and ideals' makes allies pliant, they argue. Trump's assault on trade pacts and international agencies undercuts the foundation of American power and accelerates the erosion of the postwar order. In principle, if American power were absolute, it could force partners into line indefinitely. In practice, aggressive trade measures are sowing resentments. Many countries have been party to US-led trade deals expecting mutual benefit – now they wonder if Washington will simply upend their exports to punish political stances. The WTO and other legal venues, for a long time arenas where small states could begrudge larger ones, are being largely sidelined. Without clear enforcement, the most vulnerable economies will look for alternative blocs or simply bribe each other to stay out of the US orbit. The cruellest irony is that by inflicting pain on others – or threatening to – the US is undermining the very goodwill and partnerships that underpinned its postwar hegemony. The writer is a Lahore-based senior journalist

US stocks edge higher on trade progress, inflation data
US stocks edge higher on trade progress, inflation data

Business Recorder

time7 hours ago

  • Business Recorder

US stocks edge higher on trade progress, inflation data

NEW YORK: Wall Street stocks edged higher early Wednesday after US and Chinese officials touted progress on trade talks and US consumer inflation rose modestly. US President Donald Trump said 'our deal with China is done' after two days of talks in London, while noting in a social media post that provisions on rare earths and allowing Chinese students at US universities were subject to presidential approval. Meanwhile, the US consumer price index came in at 2.4 percent from a year ago after a 2.3 percent reading in April, a modest uptick that analysts said still did not fully reflect the impact from Trump's tariffs. About five minutes into trading, the Dow Jones Industrial Average was flat at 42,861.97. Wall St muted as investors track progress of US-China trade talks The broad-based S&P 500 rose less than 0.1 percent to 6,041.15, while the tech-rich Nasdaq Composite Index gained 0.1 percent to 19,743.54. Peter Cardillo of Spartan Capital Securities described the developments as good news for stocks, but added that the inflation figures will probably not alter the Federal Reserve's wait-and-see posture on monetary policy. 'I still don't think that today's inflation data will change the minds of the Fed to remain cautious,' Cardillo said.

US inflation edges up as Trump tariffs flow through economy
US inflation edges up as Trump tariffs flow through economy

Business Recorder

time7 hours ago

  • Business Recorder

US inflation edges up as Trump tariffs flow through economy

WASHINGTON: US consumer inflation ticked up in May, in line with analyst expectations, government data showed Wednesday as President Donald Trump's sweeping tariffs began to ripple through the world's biggest economy. The consumer price index (CPI) came in at 2.4 percent from a year ago after a 2.3 percent reading in April, the Labor Department said, with headline figures cooled by energy prices. All eyes were on US inflation data after Trump imposed a blanket 10 percent levy on imports from almost all trading partners in early April. He also unveiled higher rates on dozens of economies including India and the European Union, although these have been suspended until early July. Trump engaged in a tit-for-tat tariff escalation with China as well, with both sides temporarily lowering high levies on each other's products in May. Despite the wide-ranging duties, analysts said it will take months to gauge the impact on consumer inflation. This is partly because businesses rushed to stockpile goods before Trump's new tariffs kicked in – and they are now still working their way through existing inventory. US tariffs may hamper efforts to cool inflation: Fed official 'As that inventory level gets worked down, we'll see a larger and larger pass-through of the tariffs,' Nationwide chief economist Kathy Bostjancic told AFP. Between April and May, CPI was up 0.1 percent, cooling from a 0.2 percent increase from March to April. While housing prices climbed alongside food costs, energy prices edged down over the month, the report added. The energy index fell 1.0 percent in May from a month ago, as the gasoline index declined over the month. Excluding the volatile food and energy components, so-called core CPI was up 2.8 percent from a year ago, the Labor Department said. 'Early signs' 'Many Americans are enjoying cheaper gas prices this summer,' said Navy Federal Credit Union chief economist Heather Long. 'But there are early signs of what is coming for Main Street: grocery store prices and appliance costs rose in May,' she added in a note. Samuel Tombs, chief US economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics, estimates that retailers usually take at least three months to pass on cost increases to customers. He expects price increases for 'core goods' to gain momentum in June and peak in July, while remaining elevated for the rest of the year – assuming current tariff policies remain in place. But Bostjancic said she did not expect the latest inflation report to significantly impact the US central bank's interest rate decision next week. 'The guidance remains that there's such a great degree of uncertainty of how the increased tariffs will affect prices and ultimately the economy,' she said. 'They need to wait and see, to see how this plays out over the coming months. And we should learn a lot more from the data through the summer and early fall,' she added. The Federal Reserve has begun cutting interest rates after the Covid-19 pandemic as officials monitor progress in lowering inflation sustainably. But Fed policymakers have been cautious in recent months as they monitor how the Trump administration's policies affect the economy.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store