Gold prices stabilized in Jordan at the beginning of trading today, Sunday, June 26, 2022, in anticipation of the opening of global markets trading tomorrow, Monday.
Financial markets around the world are closed on Saturday and Sunday on a weekly holiday, and trading resumes on Monday.
Gold price today in Jordan
The price of a gram of 24-carat gold today in Jordan during morning trading today, Sunday, was 41.66 dinars ($ 58.76), unchanged from yesterday’s prices.
And the price of a gram of 21 karat gold today in Jordan (the most traded in the market), 36.46 dinars ($ 51.42).
According to the “gold-price-today” platform, which specializes in gold prices, the price of a gram of 18 karat gold today in Jordan today, is regarding 31.25 dinars ($ 44.07).
As for economic gold prices today in Jordan, the price of a gram of 14 karat gold scored regarding 24.30 dinars ($ 34.28).
The price of an ounce and a pound of gold today in Jordan
The price of an ounce today in Jordan during morning trading recorded 1.296 thousand dinars (1827 dollars); While the price of the gold pound today in Jordan (8 grams of 21 karat), regarding 291.64 dinars (411.32 dollars).
Gold prices today globally
Global financial markets are awaiting the opening of trading tomorrow, Monday, amid mounting fears over the weekend, of the possibility of the US economy entering a recession.
At the conclusion of the first session on Friday, gold prices increased amid the decline of the dollar and the escalation of economic concerns, but the ongoing struggle for the yellow metal with expectations that the Federal Reserve will raise interest rates strongly, kept it on the path of recording the second weekly decline.
And gold rose in immediate transactions 0.2 percent to $ 1825.50 an ounce at the close of the session on Friday, following earlier touching its lowest level in a week at $ 1820.30 an ounce.
It seems that this week may be important for the commodity and currency markets, especially the dollar, oil and gold, as German Chancellor Olaf Scholz receives today the leaders of the Group of Seven in a three-day summit in the Bavarian Alps overshadowed by the war in Ukraine and its far-reaching consequences from lack of energy to the food crisis. .
The summit is taking place in an atmosphere darker than last year, when the leaders of Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan and the United States met for the first time since the run-up to the COVID-19 pandemic and pledged to build back better.