Bangalore Gold Rate Today Sees BIGGEST Crash In History! 24K Falls Rs 90,500; Silver Slides Too | 2 Feb Rates
Bangalore Gold Rate today: There was a sharp decline in gold and silver rates in Bangalore, aka Bengaluru on Monday, February 2, as part of a wider correction in the precious metals market in last two days.
The massive decline in precious metals prices across the international market was apparently triggered by reports that the United States President Donald Trump planned to nominate Kevin Warsh as the United States Federal Reserve Chair. As per media reports, Warsh is seen as a more hawkish choice for the position.

Back in Banglore, the massive decline in gold and silver rates today is likely to bring a lucrative opportunity among investors to purchase the precious metals.
Bangalore Gold Rate Today
The price of Bangalore gold decline significantly on Monday, February 2. The rate of 24 karat gold in Bangalore has declined by Rs 905 per gram to Rs 15,153 per gram. Whereas, the rate of 22 karat gold in Bangalore crashed nearly Rs 830 per gram to Rs 13,890 per gram. Likewise, the rate of 18 karat gold in Bangalore fell by Rs 679 per gram to Rs 11,365 per gram.
Bangalore Silver Rate Today
There was a sharp decline in the prices of silver in Bangalore. Silver rate today in the Karnataka capital declined by Rs 50 per gram to Rs 300 and by Rs 5000 per Kg to Rs 3,00,000 per kilogram,The massive decline in gold rates have come after the International gold prices saw a sharp decline over the past few trading sessions. International gold declined more than 5% to below $4,630 per ounce on Monday. International gold rates extended their losses from the prior session when the preciousmetal suffered its steepest fall in more than a decade.
The sharp decline in gold prices is followed by a massive fall in silver rates. Additionally, base metals like copper, aluminium, etc, also declined significantly during the trading ession.
Gold prices had eased as traders locked in profits following a long rally that drove the metal to fresh records. The pullback came after weeks of gains, during which buying interest had dominated activity across bullion markets.
That earlier surge had been supported by strong central bank purchases and the so-called debasement trade. Investors had shifted from currencies and bonds into physical gold, reflecting worries about rising government debt levels worldwide.
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