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Gold Prices in Pakistan Dropped by Rs 35,500 in Just One Day – Gold Predictions for Next Week

Gold Prices in Pakistan Dropped by Rs 35,500 in Just One Day – Gold Predictions for Next Week

In a dramatic and historic reversal, Pakistan’s gold market suffered its largest single-day crash on Friday, January 30, 2026, wiping out weeks of explosive gains in just a few hours. After touching an all-time high near Rs. 573,000 per tola, the market saw an aggressive correction that shocked traders, investors, and wedding buyers alike.

Below is a clean, ultra-premium, data-verified breakdown of the crash and what the next week is likely to look like.

1. Pakistan Gold Market Snapshot (January 30, 2026)

According to the All-Pakistan Gems and Jewellers Sarafa Association (APGJSA), the fall was the steepest ever recorded in rupee terms.

CategoryJan 29 PeakJan 30 RateSingle-Day Drop
Gold (24K per tola)Rs. 572,862Rs. 537,362– Rs. 35,500
Gold (24K – 10g)Rs. 491,136Rs. 460,701– Rs. 30,435
Silver (per tola)Rs. 12,175Rs. 11,069– Rs. 1,106

International Market Impact

  • Global gold price plunged $355 in one session
  • Fell from $5,558 → $5,150 per ounce
  • Estimated $3 trillion wiped out from global bullion valuations in 48 hours

2. Why Did Gold Crash So Hard?

This was not a random dip. It was a textbook correction triggered by multiple pressure points hitting at once.

A. US Federal Reserve Shock (Kevin Warsh Factor)

  • Markets reacted to strong speculation that Kevin Warsh, a known hawk, could be appointed as the next Fed Chair
  • A hawkish Fed implies:
    • Higher interest rates
    • Stronger US dollar
    • Immediate selling pressure on gold

B. Extreme Profit-Taking

  • Gold had surged over 20% in January alone
  • Institutional funds and central-bank-linked traders locked profits aggressively
  • Once selling started, algorithmic stop-losses accelerated the fall

C. Pakistan’s Local Panic Effect

  • On Thursday, gold jumped Rs. 21,200 in one day, which traders themselves called “unsustainable”
  • When international prices slipped, local wholesalers rushed to exit, amplifying the crash in rupee terms

3. What to Expect Next Week (Feb 2 – Feb 8, 2026)

Short-Term Outlook (Next 5 Trading Days)

Bias: Volatile with downside risk

  • Key Support Zone: Rs. 525,000 – 530,000 per tola
  • If this breaks decisively:
    • Another Rs. 8,000 – 12,000 drop is possible
  • Expect:
    • Sideways + choppy movement on Monday–Tuesday
    • Lower volumes as traders reassess positions

Mid-Term Outlook (February 2026)

Bias: Still bullish

Despite the crash, core bullish drivers remain intact:

  • Middle East geopolitical tensions unresolved
  • US-China & US-EU trade friction ongoing
  • Central banks (China, Turkey, Middle East) still accumulating gold
  • Pakistan rupee remains structurally weak

Most analyst consensus:
Gold is likely to stabilize above Rs. 530,000 and attempt a recovery toward Rs. 550,000+ by mid-February if global prices normalize.

4. Is the 2026 Gold Bull Run Over?

Short answer: No.
This was a violent correction, not the end of the cycle.

Historically:

  • Every major gold bull market includes 20–25% pullbacks
  • Today’s fall fits squarely within that pattern

A return to Rs. 400,000 or below would require:

  • Strong PKR appreciation
  • Sustained global rate hikes
  • No geopolitical stress
    None of these conditions currently exist.

5. Practical Advice (Based on Buyer Type)

🔹 Long-Term Investors

  • This Rs. 35,500 drop qualifies as a high-probability dip
  • Consider phased buying between Rs. 525k–535k
  • Avoid lump-sum buying at market open

🔹 Wedding & Jewellery Buyers

  • Waiting for Rs. 400k prices is not realistic in 2026
  • This correction offers a rare second chance after missing the January rally
  • Lock purchases gradually instead of timing the exact bottom

Final Verdict

  • Yes, the crash is real
  • Yes, it’s historic
  • No, gold is not “finished” for 2026

What happened on January 30, 2026 will be remembered as Pakistan’s largest single-day gold correction, but also as a moment where informed buyers gained an opportunity—while emotional traders paid the price.

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