City
Epaper

Gold holds steady amid easing US-Iran tensions; silver gains on MCX

By IANS | Updated: April 15, 2026 10:35 IST

Mumbai, April 15 Gold prices remained largely steady on Wednesday as improving prospects of easing geopolitical tensions between ...

Open in App

Mumbai, April 15 Gold prices remained largely steady on Wednesday as improving prospects of easing geopolitical tensions between the United States and Iran kept investor sentiment in check.

During early trade, MCX gold May futures were marginally higher by 0.02 per cent at Rs 1,53,305 per 10 grams.

Commenting on gold technical outlook, experts said that a sustained move above Rs 1,55,000 could revive momentum toward Rs 1,57,000-Rs 1,58,000.

“On the downside, a break below Rs 1,54,000 may lead to a corrective move toward Rs 1,52,000 and further to Rs 1,50,000,” an analyst stated.

Silver prices, however, saw stronger buying interest, with MCX silver May futures rising 0.83 per cent to Rs 2,54,842 per kg.

“Resistance is placed at Rs 2,60,000–Rs 2,63,000, with further upside toward Rs 2,68,000–Rs 2,70,000,” a market expert said.

“A sustained move above these levels could strengthen momentum and support further gains. On the downside, a break below Rs 2,48,000 may lead to a corrective move toward the Rs 2,44,000–Rs 2,40,000 range,” as per an analyst.

In the previous session, gold had ended flat at Rs 1,53,216 per 10 grams, while silver futures slipped 0.1 per cent to Rs 2,25,499 per kg.

Globally, the yellow metal held on to its recent gains amid optimism that Washington and Tehran could move towards a negotiated settlement to the conflict that began on February 28.

The easing of tensions has reduced fears of a sharp energy-supply shock, which had earlier raised concerns about inflationary pressures.

Spot gold hovered near $4,850 an ounce after rising as much as 0.6 per cent during the session. The metal had surged over 2 per cent in the previous trading session on expectations that the US and Iran may soon hold a second round of ceasefire talks.

US President Donald Trump has indicated that negotiations could resume “over the next two days,” further boosting hopes of a diplomatic breakthrough.

Despite the recent stability, gold has faced pressure in recent weeks, falling nearly 8 per cent since the conflict began.

Early in the crisis, a liquidity squeeze prompted investors to offload bullion holdings to cover losses in other asset classes.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

Other SportsAdded myself to Kayla Reyneke fan club, she will take women’s cricket to greater heights, says Anjum Chopra

National2 RJD spokesperson booked in Noida violence, over alleged attempt to spread misinformation

InternationalIndia and Germany agree to deepen cooperation in critical and emerging technologies, defence

TechnologyIndia and Germany agree to deepen cooperation in critical and emerging technologies, defence

Other SportsIPL 2026: Akeal was the one who told Noor about the length needed to bowl, says Sriram

Business Realted Stories

BusinessIndia office vacancy slips to 13.8 pc in Q1 amid surging demand

BusinessDeakin University and Smart Energy Council Bring Australian Expertise to Power India's Solar Workforce Revolution

BusinessDelhi’s draft EV policy likely to cause sharp surge in purchases in long term: Report

BusinessGold ETFs AUM triples to Rs 1.7 lakh crore in March amid geopolitical tensions

BusinessThapar Institute's Global Academic Leadership Summit 2026 Concludes with a Unified Vision for AI, Sustainability, and the Future of Higher Education