Gold Monthly Price - Singapore Dollar per Troy ounce

Data as of March 2026

Range
Mar 2016 - Mar 2026: 4,498.376 (262.57%)
Chart

Description: Gold (UK), 99.5% fine, London afternoon fixing, average of daily rates

Unit: Singapore Dollar per Troy ounce



Source: World Bank

See also: Mineral production statistics

See also: Top commodity suppliers

See also: Commodities glossary - Definitions of terms used in commodity trading

Overview

Gold is a precious metal valued for its rarity, chemical stability, and ease of fabrication. On commodity markets, it is typically priced as a spot or benchmark quotation in U.S. dollars per troy ounce, with widely followed references including the London afternoon fixing for gold of 99.5% fineness. The troy ounce, equal to 31.1035 grams, is the standard unit used in bullion trading and in many financial contracts. Gold is traded in physical form as bars, coins, and refined bullion, and it also appears in exchange-traded and over-the-counter market structures linked to deliverable metal.

Its principal uses are in jewelry, investment holdings, central bank reserves, and industrial applications that require corrosion resistance and high conductivity. Jewelry and investment demand dominate the market’s physical flow, while electronics, dentistry, and certain chemical and medical uses consume smaller but persistent volumes. Because gold is durable, highly divisible, and globally recognized, it functions both as a commodity input and as a monetary asset.

Supply Drivers

Gold supply is shaped by geology, mining economics, and the long lead times required to develop deposits. Production is concentrated in countries with large mineral endowments and established mining infrastructure, including South Africa, Australia, Russia, Canada, the United States, and parts of Latin America and West Africa. Ore grades, depth, metallurgy, and access to water and power strongly influence extraction costs. As deposits mature, miners often face declining grades and higher stripping or processing costs, which can limit output growth even when prices are favorable.

Unlike agricultural commodities, gold supply does not follow a harvest cycle, but it is still constrained by exploration, permitting, financing, and construction timelines that can span many years. Weather affects open-pit and alluvial operations through flooding, rainfall, and transport disruption, while underground mines are more exposed to ventilation, safety, and energy constraints. Political and regulatory conditions matter because mining is capital intensive and location specific. Recycled gold from jewelry, scrap, and industrial waste also contributes to supply, and this secondary flow tends to respond to price incentives because gold is durable and easily recovered.

Demand Drivers

Gold demand is driven by jewelry fabrication, investment demand, central bank reserve management, and industrial use. Jewelry consumption is especially important in countries with long-standing cultural preferences for gold ornaments and savings, including India, China, the Middle East, and parts of Southeast Asia. In these markets, gold serves both decorative and store-of-value functions, so demand reflects income growth, household wealth, and cultural tradition. Investment demand comes from bars, coins, exchange-traded products, and over-the-counter holdings, with buyers often seeking liquidity, portability, and a hedge against currency debasement or financial stress.

Central banks hold gold as a reserve asset because it is no one’s liability and can diversify foreign exchange reserves. Industrial demand is smaller but persistent, led by electronics, where gold’s conductivity and resistance to corrosion make it useful in connectors, bonding wire, and specialized components. Dental and medical uses are narrower than in the past, but they remain part of the demand base. Substitution occurs with silver, platinum, palladium, and base metals in some fabrication uses, while jewelry demand can shift between gold purity levels and alternative materials depending on price and fashion.

Macro and Financial Drivers

Gold is sensitive to the U.S. dollar because it is commonly priced in dollars; a weaker dollar generally makes gold cheaper in other currencies and can support demand outside the United States. Real interest rates are also important because gold yields no cash flow, so the opportunity cost of holding it rises when interest-bearing assets become more attractive. Inflation expectations, currency uncertainty, and financial stress often increase demand for gold as a store of value, although the metal does not behave like a perfect inflation hedge in every period.

Because gold is dense and valuable, storage and insurance costs are modest relative to many commodities, which supports active inventory holding and liquid forward markets. The term structure can move between contango and backwardation depending on financing costs, lease rates, and immediate physical tightness. Gold often trades with a distinct relationship to risk assets: it can attract flows during periods of market stress, while also responding to shifts in monetary policy and broad liquidity conditions.

MonthPriceChange
Mar 20161,713.21-
Apr 20161,678.14-2.05%
May 20161,727.602.95%
Jun 20161,730.590.17%
Jul 20161,806.104.36%
Aug 20161,805.79-0.02%
Sep 20161,802.78-0.17%
Oct 20161,752.46-2.79%
Nov 20161,743.43-0.52%
Dec 20161,662.45-4.64%
Jan 20171,704.162.51%
Feb 20171,746.962.51%
Mar 20171,730.90-0.92%
Apr 20171,771.162.33%
May 20171,738.35-1.85%
Jun 20171,744.270.34%
Jul 20171,696.38-2.75%
Aug 20171,745.932.92%
Sep 20171,773.121.56%
Oct 20171,740.41-1.84%
Nov 20171,739.50-0.05%
Dec 20171,702.82-2.11%
Jan 20181,760.843.41%
Feb 20181,756.96-0.22%
Mar 20181,741.46-0.88%
Apr 20181,755.080.78%
May 20181,744.98-0.58%
Jun 20181,726.85-1.04%
Jul 20181,687.34-2.29%
Aug 20181,645.07-2.51%
Sep 20181,643.58-0.09%
Oct 20181,675.951.97%
Nov 20181,679.290.20%
Dec 20181,713.862.06%
Jan 20191,751.962.22%
Feb 20191,786.942.00%
Mar 20191,761.48-1.42%
Apr 20191,743.82-1.00%
May 20191,759.470.90%
Jun 20191,852.345.28%
Jul 20191,922.563.79%
Aug 20192,078.128.09%
Sep 20192,084.200.29%
Oct 20192,050.89-1.60%
Nov 20192,002.05-2.38%
Dec 20192,008.820.34%
Jan 20202,108.484.96%
Feb 20202,219.455.26%
Mar 20202,255.091.61%
Apr 20202,397.726.32%
May 20202,433.281.48%
Jun 20202,414.99-0.75%
Jul 20202,562.536.11%
Aug 20202,696.445.23%
Sep 20202,624.62-2.66%
Oct 20202,584.09-1.54%
Nov 20202,517.25-2.59%
Dec 20202,479.59-1.50%
Jan 20212,474.57-0.20%
Feb 20212,400.73-2.98%
Mar 20212,306.52-3.92%
Apr 20212,348.061.80%
May 20212,463.124.90%
Jun 20212,445.56-0.71%
Jul 20212,449.530.16%
Aug 20212,419.25-1.24%
Sep 20212,393.89-1.05%
Oct 20212,400.390.27%
Nov 20212,470.562.92%
Dec 20212,445.67-1.01%
Jan 20222,452.940.30%
Feb 20222,499.511.90%
Mar 20222,647.785.93%
Apr 20222,645.07-0.10%
May 20222,555.11-3.40%
Jun 20222,541.15-0.55%
Jul 20222,416.03-4.92%
Aug 20222,442.701.10%
Sep 20222,376.70-2.70%
Oct 20222,371.37-0.22%
Nov 20222,396.051.04%
Dec 20222,432.241.51%
Jan 20232,517.073.49%
Feb 20232,467.79-1.96%
Mar 20232,565.783.97%
Apr 20232,663.593.81%
May 20232,666.870.12%
Jun 20232,616.33-1.89%
Jul 20232,600.65-0.60%
Aug 20232,591.28-0.36%
Sep 20232,614.010.88%
Oct 20232,623.550.37%
Nov 20232,677.672.06%
Dec 20232,705.891.05%
Jan 20242,716.920.41%
Feb 20242,720.350.13%
Mar 20242,892.016.31%
Apr 20243,163.729.40%
May 20243,177.070.42%
Jun 20243,144.66-1.02%
Jul 20243,229.042.68%
Aug 20243,250.420.66%
Sep 20243,333.352.55%
Oct 20243,521.695.65%
Nov 20243,543.850.63%
Dec 20243,568.570.70%
Jan 20253,690.873.43%
Feb 20253,900.105.67%
Mar 20253,986.382.21%
Apr 20254,262.296.92%
May 20254,284.070.51%
Jun 20254,305.440.50%
Jul 20254,279.37-0.61%
Aug 20254,329.891.18%
Sep 20254,712.208.83%
Oct 20255,255.0711.52%
Nov 20255,329.171.41%
Dec 20255,565.704.44%
Jan 20266,108.389.75%
Feb 20266,362.724.16%
Mar 20266,211.58-2.38%

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