logo

Gold declines Rs 900 to Rs 98,900/10 g on Iran-Israel ceasefire hopes

Economic Times24-06-2025
Gold prices plummeted Rs 900 to Rs 98,900 per 10 grams in the national capital on Tuesday as the expectations of a ceasefire between Iran and Israel reduced the precious metal's safe-haven appeal in the global market.
ADVERTISEMENT According to the All India Sarafa Association, the precious metal of 99.9 per cent purity had closed at Rs 99,800 per 10 grams in the previous market session.
Gold of 99.5 per cent purity depreciated by Rs 800 to Rs 98,300 per 10 grams (inclusive of all taxes). It had finished at Rs 99,100 per 10 grams on Monday.
"Gold is under pressure as safe-haven demand eases after the US confirmed a full ceasefire between Iran and Israel. The announcement came shortly after Iran attacked a US military base in Qatar, briefly heightening tensions before quickly calming them.
"With fears of further escalation fading, investors are booking profits and pulling back from gold," Abans Financial Services' Chief Executive Officer Chintan Mehta said. Silver prices also diminished by Rs 1,000 to Rs 1,04,200 per kilogram (inclusive of all taxes) on Tuesday. The metal had ended at Rs 1,05,200 per kg in the previous market close.
ADVERTISEMENT
Meanwhile, spot gold fell by USD 46.05 or 1.37 per cent to USD 3,323.05 per ounce in the overseas markets.
"Investors are closely watching Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, who is set to testify before US Congress on Tuesday and Wednesday, which can provide any signals on the future policy path of interest rate cuts," Saumil Gandhi, Senior Analyst - Commodities at HDFC Securities, said.
(You can now subscribe to our ETMarkets WhatsApp channel)
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

RBL Bank shares rally 3% as Dubai-based Emirates NBD Bank eyes up to 20% stake
RBL Bank shares rally 3% as Dubai-based Emirates NBD Bank eyes up to 20% stake

Economic Times

time11 minutes ago

  • Economic Times

RBL Bank shares rally 3% as Dubai-based Emirates NBD Bank eyes up to 20% stake

Shares of RBL Bank rose 2.7% to Rs 266.95 on Wednesday after reports said Dubai government-owned Emirates NBD Bank is in talks to acquire up to a 20% stake in the private lender through a significant capital infusion. ADVERTISEMENT The stock, which has rallied more than 21% in the past month and over 64% in the past six, rose for an eighth time in nine sessions. It closed Tuesday at Rs 259.95, up 4.6%, with a market value of Rs 15,831.21 crore. The Emirates NBD Bank PJSC is in advanced discussions to acquire a minority stake in RBL Bank through a preferential allotment. This would mark a primary capital infusion into RBL and help the Dubai-government-owned lender deepen its Asia strategy. The deal, still under negotiation, could be similar in structure to the recent SMBC-Yes Bank investment. Emirates NBD may end up holding around 15–20% of RBL's expanded capital base, just below the open offer threshold, pending regulatory approval. That would translate to an investment of approximately Rs 3,166.24 crore. 'However, the deal is likely to take place at a premium to the current price,' people familiar with the matter told The Economic Times. RBL Bank is entirely publicly owned, with several domestic institutions holding modest stakes. Quant Mutual Fund owns 6.65%, Nippon Life India 3.11%, ICICI Prudential Life 1.06% and LIC 1.19%. Mahindra and Mahindra acquired a 3.48% stake in 2023, while Zerodha holds 1.24%. British International Investment exited its 3.82% holding in April. ADVERTISEMENT The Reserve Bank of India in May granted in-principle approval to Emirates NBD to convert its existing Indian branches in Chennai, Gurugram and Mumbai into a wholly owned subsidiary. The Dubai-based bank also recently launched investment banking operations in India.'There is a deep connect between UAE and India, both diplomatic and commercial. The bank has been eyeing opportunities but has not been very keen to buy into NBFCs (non-banking finance companies) unlike some of their peers,' an industry executive told The Economic Times. 'There is also a lot of synergy in wealth and other product distribution.' ADVERTISEMENT RBL Bank, originally set up 70 years ago in Maharashtra, transformed itself into a national player beginning in 2010, focusing on credit cards and microfinance. However, its differentiated asset strategy is considered cyclical and exposed to stress in unsecured the March quarter, RBL Bank's net profit fell 80% sequentially to Rs 68.7 crore, despite a rise in other income to Rs 1,000 crore. Net interest income dropped 2.3% year-on-year to Rs 1,563 crore. ADVERTISEMENT 'Business growth is gaining traction and slippages are expected to normalise by 2QFY26,' Nitin Aggarwal, analyst at Motilal Oswal told The Economic Times. 'Margins will be flattish to lower before it will claw back up. The trajectory is expected to improve starting FY26. The cards business is expected to grow in the mid-single digits.' Despite the stock's recent rally, analysts say it still trades below book value and remains among the most affordable banking stocks in India, with a P/E ratio of over 21. However, sources caution that talks may not result in a deal. The lender is also exploring a capital raise from institutional investors as a fallback. ADVERTISEMENT If successful, Emirates NBD's move will mark the second major investment from West Asia into an Indian bank this quarter. In April, Abu Dhabi Investment Authority and Warburg Pincus committed Rs 7,500 crore to IDFC First Bank. Also read | Emirates NBD eyes RBL Bank stake for India, Asia play (Disclaimer: Recommendations, suggestions, views and opinions given by the experts are their own. These do not represent the views of the Economic Times)

MF exposure in NBFCs grow 32.5 pc to reach Rs 2.77 lakh crore in May
MF exposure in NBFCs grow 32.5 pc to reach Rs 2.77 lakh crore in May

Hans India

time17 minutes ago

  • Hans India

MF exposure in NBFCs grow 32.5 pc to reach Rs 2.77 lakh crore in May

New Delhi: The mutual fund exposure in the non-banking financial companies (NBFCs) grow 32.5 per cent to reach Rs 2.77 lakh crore in May, according to a new report. This year-on-year growth was driven by commercial papers (CPs) and corporate debt, which remained over Rs 2 lakh crore for 14 consecutive months, according to a CareEdge Ratings report. The previous records were Rs 2.69 lakh crore in April this year and Rs 2.64 lakh crore in July 2018. However, the share of NBFC credit in total bank credit decreased from 9.3 per cent in May 2024 to 8.5 per cent in May this year, the data showed. The mutual fund industry's total assets under management (AUM) rose to Rs 72.2 lakh crore in May from Rs 70 lakh crore in April. The industry witnessed net inflows of Rs 29,108 crore during the month, with 65 per cent flows from the equity category, according to the latest AMFI data. AUM of equity funds rose 4.83 per cent on-month to Rs 32.05 lakh crore, driven by positive flows and mark-to-market (MTM) gains. Flexi caps witnessed inflows of Rs 3,841 crore, the highest in the equity category for the third straight month. Hybrid fund assets grew 4.43 per cent to Rs 9.55 lakh crore, driven by highest monthly net inflows for the category worth Rs 20,765 crore and MTM gains. Arbitrage funds witnessed the highest inflows within the category, amounting to Rs 15,702 crore. Passive funds category witnessed net inflows of Rs 5,525 crore during the month, marking the 55th consecutive month of net inflows. Gold exchange-traded funds (ETFs) witnessed net inflows during the month, compared with outflows in the previous two months, driven by geopolitical tensions, market volatility and rate cut expectations.

India's push for zero tariff on labour-intensive exports is combination of economic strategy & domestic politics: GTRI
India's push for zero tariff on labour-intensive exports is combination of economic strategy & domestic politics: GTRI

Time of India

time25 minutes ago

  • Time of India

India's push for zero tariff on labour-intensive exports is combination of economic strategy & domestic politics: GTRI

India is pushing hard for full tariff elimination on labour-intensive exports like garments, footwear, carpets, and leather goods in the final phase of Free Trade Agreement (FTA) talks with the U.S. Without duty-free access, India fears the deal will be politically unsellable. Current U.S. tariffs remain high, and Washington is resisting full reciprocity, raising concerns of an imbalanced deal. Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads As negotiations for a long-anticipated Free Trade Agreement (FTA) between India and the United States enter their final stretch, India is making a last-minute, high-stakes push for full tariff elimination on its labour-intensive to Global Trade Research Initiative (GTRI), without duty-free access for sectors like garments, footwear, carpets, and leather goods, the deal could become politically unsellable at home. India's insistence is rooted in a combination of economic strategy and domestic political labour-intensive sectors--dominated by small and medium enterprises and providing critical employment across states like Uttar Pradesh, Tamil Nadu, Gujarat, and West Bengal--contributed over USD 14.3 billion to India's exports to the U.S. in on these goods currently range between 8 per cent and 20 per cent, especially high for garments and footwear, putting Indian exporters at a steep disadvantage in the American India has offered to reduce its Most Favoured Nation (MFN) duties on US goods as part of the deal, Washington appears unwilling to says the US is not ready to scrap either its high MFN tariffs or the country-specific duties that currently stand at 26 per cent, proposing instead a limited reduction to 10 per cent--still a significant surcharge that could negate any meaningful market access for Indian imbalance has raised concerns in India that the FTA, if signed under the current terms, would disproportionately favour American to the tension is the U.S. Congress's lack of fast-track trade authority, which limits Washington's ability to offer broad tariff broader export profile to the U.S. in FY2025 stood at USD 86.5 billion, up 11.6 per cent from the previous year. Of this, medium labour-intensity sectors--such as electronics, chemicals, automobiles, and jewellery--accounted for USD 44.6 exports face moderate U.S. tariffs of 2 per cent to 5 per cent, with some exceptions reaching 7 per cent. Meanwhile, low labour-intensity exports, such as pharmaceuticals and heavy machinery, totalling USD 17.3 billion, already benefit from minimal tariffs below 2 per cent and are not central to India's position is that full tariff elimination is essential not only for equitable trade but also for social goals like employment generation, MSME empowerment, and increased economic participation by negotiators caution that if Washington insists on retaining high tariffs while India cuts its own, the deal risks being perceived as "lopsided and politically untenable."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store