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Gold Crosses Rs.1 Lakh: Is Rally Sustainable or Nearing Exhaustion?

  • 22nd April 2025
  • 12:00:00 AM
  • 2 min read
PL Capital Desk

Mumbai, 22 April 2025: Gold prices surpassed a psychological milestone today, as MCX October futures touched an intraday high of ₹1,00,484 per 10 grams—the first time Indian markets have witnessed gold trading above the ₹1 lakh mark. The contract eventually closed at ₹99,178, registering a gain of ₹1,899 on the day.

This marks the fourth consecutive session of gains, fuelled by a cocktail of geopolitical risk, safe-haven buying, central bank purchases, and US dollar weakness. But now that the milestone has been breached, the pressing question is: can this rally extend further, or is a correction due?

 

What’s Driving the Rally?

Safe-haven inflows: Heightened geopolitical tensions and macroeconomic instability have heightened investor appetite for gold.

Dollar weakness: A soft US dollar has boosted the relative value of gold globally.

Central bank demand: Central banks across the globe continue to accumulate gold as part of their reserve diversification strategies.

Domestic sentiment: Akshaya Tritiya-related buying is lending seasonal support to the Indian market.

 

Rally Momentum or Resistance Zone?

Now that gold has breached ₹1 lakh—a critical technical and psychological threshold—market participants are closely watching for signs of either continuation or reversal.

 

Bullish case:

  • Global risk aversion remains elevated
  • Further weakness in the dollar
  • Concerns around inflation and stagflation

Central banks maintaining gold purchases through 2025

 

Bearish risk:

  • Profit-taking at psychological highs
  • Stabilisation of equity markets or reversal in interest rate trends
  • Recovery in risk assets drawing flows away from bullion

 

What Should Investors Do?

  • Gold’s long-term outlook remains constructive, but investors should avoid emotional or reactive buying at peak levels.
  • If underexposed, consider a staggered entry via Sovereign Gold Bonds (SGBs) or Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs).
  • If already exposed, review your allocation—a 5–10% exposure is generally considered optimal for diversification.
  • Avoid large allocations in pursuit of quick gains—gold is a hedge, not a growth asset.

 

Bottom Line

The ₹1 lakh level has been crossed—but whether it is a breather or a breakout is to be seen in how global macro stories shape up over the next few weeks. For now, gold remains a beneficiary of fear-driven flows—but as always, discipline outweighs FOMO in portfolio decisions.

PL Capital Desk

Disclaimer: This blog has been written exclusively for educational purposes. The securities mentioned are only examples and not recommendations. It is based on several secondary sources on the internet and is subject to changes. Please consult an expert before making related decisions.

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