The surge in demand for gold has driven up coin prices to as much as 30% above their intrinsic value with a number of factors contributing to the inflated gold coin price bubble within the Tehran market.
Each gold coin minted by the Central Bank of Iran weighs 8.13598 grams and is made of 22-karat gold. However, each ounce of gold, which reached a historic high of $2737 (€2528) on Monday is equivalent to 31.103 grams of 24-karat gold.
Therefore, each gold coin minted by the Central Bank of Iran is equivalent to 0.2354472 ounces of 24-karat gold.
So, based on yesterday’s gold price, each gold coin is worth $644.41 (€595.28). However, in the Tehran market on Monday, it fetched up to the equivalent of $861.5 (€795), some 30% more than its daily value on the global market.
Apart from the global surge in gold prices, the continuous depreciation of the Iranian rial against the US dollar has caused the price of gold coins in Iran to rocket. Over the past year, the price of gold coin in rial has nearly doubled.
On Monday, the US dollar reached a new high of 650,000 rials on Tehran’s free market, while the euro was sold at 705,000 rials.
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These are the highest prices since 13 April, when the dollar hit a record 670,000 rials and the euro reached 715,000 rials, just before Iran’s initial missile strike on Israel.
On 5 October, 2023, two days before Hamas’s deadly attack on Israel, the dollar was trading at 500,000 rials. By Monday, 21 October, the figure had soared to 650,000 rials.
The Iranian rial has lost about 30% of its value against the US dollar in the past year, during the tension in Gaza.
Meanwhile, the official inflation rate in Iran stands at 35%, slightly below the average annual inflation rate over the past six years of 42%.
As a result, due to the impacts of Western economic sanctions and the inability of the government to manage the economy efficiently, Iranian people are converting their savings into valuable assets.
To reduce the demand for foreign currency, the government has declared the possession of more than 10,000 euros equivalent to be smuggling.
In addition, due to the shortage of foreign currency in the Iranian free market caused by government-imposed legal restrictions, the demand for gold coins has increased.
Demand has been further intensified because of the recession in the housing and stock markets, stemming from economic insecurity caused by the looming threat of war between Iran and Israel.