GOLD Live Chart & Trading Conditions

GOLD iconUSD icon
Gold

SPOT Gold Ounce vs US Dollar

Gold Live Price

4329.38000
-0.02%
1GOLD = –––USD –––%
GOLD
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Latest GOLD Forecasts

About GOLD

Gold is one of the most widely followed precious metals and is often reviewed as both a market instrument and a defensive asset. Its price can react to US dollar strength, real yields, inflation expectations, central-bank demand, geopolitical risk sentiment, and changes in investor appetite for safe-haven assets. Because gold is actively followed across global sessions, traders often compare live chart movement with forecasts and technical levels before reviewing trading conditions. FXGlory’s Gold page brings live pricing, recent chart movement, latest forecasts, technical-analysis tools, and Gold trading conditions together. Users can check spread, point value, contract size, leverage rules, minimum trade size, lot step, and weekly trading hours in one place.

GOLD Trading Conditions

Symbol description
SPOT Gold Once vs US Dollar
Point
0.01
Typical spread
5 pips
Stops level
50
Freeze level
0
Contract size
100 units
Hedged margin
50%
Maximum leverage
Account type dependent
Minimum trade size
0.01 lots
Maximum trade size
1000 lots
Lot step
0.01 lots
Sunday
Closed
Monday
01:00 - 24:00
Tuesday
01:00 - 24:00
Wednesday
01:00 - 24:00
Thursday
01:00 - 24:00
Friday
01:00 - 24:00
Saturday
Closed

GOLD FAQs

What is gold trading?

Gold trading involves speculating on the price movement of gold, a precious metal widely followed by traders, investors, and central banks. Traders may use live gold charts, forecasts, market news, and technical analysis to follow price changes.
Gold is commonly priced in US dollars, so dollar strength or weakness can influence gold prices. Traders also watch real yields, inflation expectations, Federal Reserve policy, central-bank demand, and geopolitical risk.
Gold prices can be affected by Federal Reserve policy, US dollar movement, real interest rates, inflation expectations, central-bank demand, geopolitical risk, market sentiment, and changes in global liquidity.
Gold does not pay interest, so rising real interest rates can make gold less attractive compared with yield-bearing assets. Falling real rates, inflation concerns, or safe-haven demand can support gold prices.