Gold and silver prices moved sharply on 2 December 2025. 24-karat gold in India traded around ₹1,30,490 per 10 grams, while silver rose to about ₹1,88,100 per kilogram. Silver’s gains outpaced gold’s, driven by rate-cut hopes, global demand, and tight supply. What does this divergence mean for investors tracking precious metals?
Silver’s recent rally reflects several converging factors. First, global expectations that the US Federal Reserve may cut interest rates soon lowered the appeal of yield-bearing assets. Lower rates reduce the opportunity for holding metals. Both gold and silver benefited.
Second, silver’s strong industrial demand added extra momentum. Silver is used widely in electronics, solar panels, and medical equipment. As manufacturing and green-energy demand rise, so does demand for silver. Supply constraints make the price more sensitive.
Third, domestic factors played a role. A weaker rupee pushed up local prices of bullion. At the same time, strong wedding-season demand in India added buying pressure in silver and gold.
Because of this mix of macro and local drivers, silver’s gains have been sharper than gold’s.
Silver prices in Delhi rose from around ₹1,85,000 per kg at the end of November to ₹1,88,100 on 2 December, a jump of over 1.67% in a few days.
Gold remained comparatively stable. The 24-karat rate moved slightly upwards to ₹1,30,490 per 10 grams.
Over the past 12 months, silver’s price surge significantly outpaced gold’s. Some estimates show silver's rallying was much greater compared to gold in 2025, while gold’s rise was more moderate.
These data points show silver riding a wave of both investment demand and real-economy demand, not just safe-haven buying.
Watch global interest rate direction closely. If the Fed maintains or raises rates instead of cutting, metals may face pressure. A strong dollar tends to weigh on gold and silver prices.
Monitor industrial demand signals. Silver relies heavily on industrial consumption in electronics, solar energy, and healthcare. Any signs of slowdown may hurt silver more than gold, which is more purely an investment asset.
Track supply trends and mining output. Silver supply remains tight globally due to limited new mines and low stockpiles. That structural tightness underpins higher prices, especially if demand stays strong.
Keep an eye on the currency exchange rate in India. A weaker rupee increases the rupee price of gold and silver, affecting domestic demand and buying patterns.
Finally, watch jewellery and festival season demand in India. Local buying season could add further tailwinds, especially for silver, which remains relatively affordable compared to gold.
Taken together, these factors raise an important question for investors: will this mix of industrial demand, supply tightness and currency moves give silver an edge over gold, or will the price gap between the two narrow as global markets shift?
References
@mathrubhumi
Reuters
Investopedia
India Today
Goodreturns
The Economic Times
The Silver Institute
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