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However, in the domestic market, there was an uptick in price due to the increase in import customs duty. Gold futures (₹1,58,547/10 gm) was up 3.9 per cent and silver futures (₹2,71,886/kg) gained 3.8 per cent. Below is our analysis.
Gold futures (June) broke out of the resistance at ₹1,55,000 and marked a two-month high of ₹1,64,497 last Wednesday. But then the price moderated to close the week at ₹1,58,547.
The breakout is unlikely to sustain, given the weakness in gold in the global market. We expect gold futures to see a decline to ₹1,48,500. A breach of this can lead to a fall to ₹1,40,000.
But in case there is a rally, it is likely to be capped at ₹1,63,000.
Trade strategy: Short gold futures (June) at ₹1,58,550. Place stop-loss at ₹1,65,000. When the price drops to ₹1,53,000, revise the stop-loss to ₹1,55,000. Exit at ₹1,48,500.
Silver futures (July) broke out of the resistance at ₹2,63,000 early last week. It extended the rise to mark a two-month high of ₹3,04,891 on Wednesday before seeing a correction in the subsequent sessions.
Like in gold futures, the breakout in silver futures, too, might not sustain. From the current level, we expect silver futures to fall to ₹2,50,000 in the near term. Next support is at ₹2,40,000.
Trade strategy: Short silver futures, if it inches up to ₹2,85,000 for a better risk-reward ratio. Initial stop-loss can be ₹3,05,000. Book profits at ₹2,50,000.
Published on May 16, 2026
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