KmalServicoGold · Finance · Intel
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Short, practical explanations of how the gold market works — from spot price to storage.

The spot price of gold is the current market price at which one troy ounce (31.1035 grams) of .999 fine gold can be bought or sold for immediate settlement — typically two business days (T+2). It is the reference number every jeweller, refiner, bank and investor uses as a starting point for pricing physical and paper gold.

Where the price comes from

Spot gold trades primarily over-the-counter (OTC) in London, with additional price discovery from COMEX futures in New York and the Shanghai Gold Exchange. Bullion banks continuously stream two-way quotes (bid/ask), and data vendors aggregate these into the single 'XAU/USD' number you see on live tickers.

Spot vs. retail price

You will never buy physical gold exactly at spot. Dealers add a premium to cover refining, minting, insurance, shipping and margin. A 1 oz coin typically costs 3–8% above spot; smaller bars and jewellery carry higher markups. When selling back, expect a small discount to spot.

Why it changes every second

Gold reacts to real yields, the US dollar, inflation expectations, central-bank buying, geopolitical stress and ETF flows. Because these inputs move continuously, the spot price updates tick-by-tick during the 23-hour trading day (Sunday 6pm ET → Friday 5pm ET).

More guides coming soon

Deep dives on central-bank gold reserves, mining supply, ETF flows and technical analysis are on the way. Bookmark this page.