Gold, silver fall for 4th session as US strikes Iran, Brent crude surges 3%

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Gold, silver fall for 4th session as US strikes Iran, Brent crude surges 3%

Synopsis

Gold has now fallen for four straight sessions despite escalating US-Iran tensions — a sign that a stronger dollar is overpowering the usual safe-haven bid. Meanwhile, Brent crude surging past $76 on Strait of Hormuz fears tells a different story: markets are pricing supply disruption in oil, not a flight to metal safety. The divergence is the real story here.

Key Takeaways

MCX gold traded at ₹1,45,000 per 10 grams on 8 July , down ₹392 or 0.27 per cent , hitting an intraday low of ₹1,44,750 .
MCX silver fell to an intraday low of ₹2,28,925 per kg , declining as much as 0.83 per cent .
Gold has extended losses for a fourth consecutive session and is trading below its 20-, 50-, and 100-period EMAs .
The sell-off followed fresh US military strikes on Iran after three oil tankers were attacked in the Strait of Hormuz .
Brent crude surged over 3 per cent to above $76 a barrel ; WTI climbed above $72 a barrel .
Analysts warn silver could see steeper losses if it breaks below key support of ₹2.23 lakh per kg .

MCX gold futures slipped to ₹1,45,000 per 10 grams by 10:35 am IST on Wednesday, 8 July, extending losses for a fourth consecutive session as fresh US military strikes on Iran rattled commodity markets. Silver also came under pressure, while Brent crude surged more than 3 per cent — an unusual divergence that analysts say reflects the market's risk calculus around the Strait of Hormuz.

Gold and Silver Prices on MCX

Gold futures for the August 5 contract on the Multi Commodity Exchange (MCX) opened at ₹1,45,200 per 10 grams, down ₹192 from the previous close of ₹1,45,392. The yellow metal subsequently slid to an intraday low of ₹1,44,750, a decline of ₹642 or 0.44 per cent, before steadying around ₹1,45,000, lower by ₹392 or 0.27 per cent.

Silver futures for the September 4 contract opened at ₹2,30,015 per kg, down ₹842 from the prior close of ₹2,30,857. The white metal hit an intraday low of ₹2,28,925, falling as much as ₹1,932 or 0.83 per cent, before trading at ₹2,29,401, off by ₹1,456 or 0.63 per cent.

International Markets Echo the Weakness

Selling pressure was equally visible on global exchanges. COMEX gold traded 0.43 per cent lower at $4,139 per ounce, while COMEX silver declined 0.54 per cent to around $61 per ounce. The synchronised decline across domestic and international benchmarks underscores the broad-based nature of the sell-off.

Technical Signals Point to Continued Weakness

According to commodity market experts, gold is now trading below its key 20-, 50-, and 100-period exponential moving averages (EMAs) on the four-hour chart — a configuration that signals continued downward momentum. Rising open interest alongside falling prices, they noted, points to fresh short build-up in the current contract.

Silver, too, is trading below its 50-, 100-, and 200-period EMAs. Analysts cautioned that a slip below the crucial support of around ₹2.23 lakh per kg could open the door to steeper losses.

The Geopolitical Trigger: US Strikes and Hormuz Tensions

The immediate catalyst for the precious metals sell-off was a fresh round of US military strikes on Iran, carried out after three oil tankers transiting the Strait of Hormuz were attacked, according to the US military. Washington also moved to revoke licences related to Iranian oil exports, further escalating regional tensions.

The development presents a counter-intuitive market reaction: typically, geopolitical flare-ups drive safe-haven demand for gold. This time, however, the dollar strengthened on the back of the strikes, weighing on dollar-denominated metals. This is the fourth straight session in which gold has failed to attract safe-haven buying despite a worsening Middle East situation.

Crude Oil Surges on Supply Fears

While precious metals fell, crude oil moved sharply higher. International benchmark Brent crude rose more than 3 per cent to trade above $76 a barrel, while US West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude climbed over 3 per cent to above $72 a barrel. The Strait of Hormuz — through which roughly 20 per cent of global oil supply transits — remains the focal point of supply-disruption anxiety.

The divergence between falling gold and rising crude is being watched closely; if crude-driven inflation expectations firm up, gold could find renewed support in the sessions ahead.

Point of View

Not bullion. That is a structural concern for gold bulls who have priced in a Middle East risk premium. The more consequential signal is crude above $76 — if that feeds into inflation expectations, the Fed's rate-cut timeline shifts, and gold faces a double headwind of a stronger dollar and delayed easing. Silver's technical picture is worse; a break of ₹2.23 lakh could trigger stop-loss cascades. The Strait of Hormuz remains the single variable that could flip all of this overnight.
NationPress
8 Jul 2026

Frequently Asked Questions

Why are gold and silver prices falling despite US-Iran tensions?
Gold and silver fell on 8 July even as US-Iran tensions escalated because a stronger US dollar — typically boosted by risk-off sentiment — is weighing on dollar-denominated metals, offsetting the usual safe-haven demand. This is the fourth straight session in which precious metals have failed to attract geopolitical buying.
What are MCX gold and silver prices today, 8 July?
MCX gold was trading at ₹1,45,000 per 10 grams, down ₹392 or 0.27 per cent, with an intraday low of ₹1,44,750. MCX silver was at ₹2,29,401 per kg, lower by ₹1,456 or 0.63 per cent, after hitting a low of ₹2,28,925.
What triggered the latest US military strikes on Iran?
According to the US military, the fresh strikes on Iran were carried out after three oil tankers transiting the Strait of Hormuz were attacked. Washington also revoked licences related to Iranian oil exports, further escalating regional tensions.
Why is crude oil rising while gold is falling?
Brent crude surged over 3 per cent to above $76 a barrel because the Strait of Hormuz — a critical chokepoint for global oil supply — is directly threatened by the US-Iran standoff, raising supply-disruption fears. Gold, by contrast, is being pressured by a stronger dollar rather than benefiting from safe-haven flows.
What is the key support level for silver that traders are watching?
Commodity market analysts are closely watching the ₹2.23 lakh per kg level for MCX silver. A sustained break below that support could trigger further downside, as silver is already trading below its 50-, 100-, and 200-period exponential moving averages.
Nation Press
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