Historical Archive · XAU/USD · Friday

Gold Price on April 7, 1989

International gold spot price for Friday, April 7, 1989— sourced from gold-api.com's continuous historical archive of London gold fixings.

XAU / USD

per troy ounce

USD / Gram

1 gram

USD / Tola

11.664 grams

Price action on April 7, 1989

1-day move

-0.55%

vs prior session

7-day move

-2.40%

rolling week

30-day move

-2.70%

rolling month

YTD

-5.37%

since 1 Jan 1989

Calendar position

Day 97 of 365

Trading day

84th of 310

Position in 1989's range

39% (low $355.80 → high $423.90)

Surrounding ±15 trading days

31 sessions
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Daily XAU/USD spot price for the trading sessions surrounding April 7, 1989. Useful for spotting whether this date sat at a local high, local low, or mid-range within the broader trend.

Why no country breakdown? Reliable historical exchange-rate data only extends back to 1 January 1990. For dates between 1970 and 1989 we publish the verified XAU/USD price — the same global benchmark used by central banks and bullion dealers — but local-currency conversions are not provided to avoid showing inaccurate historical figures. For dates from 1990 onwards, full country tables (PKR, INR, AED, SAR, GBP, EUR and 100+ more) are available.

Gold in 1989 — at a glance

Approximate price band

$356 – $416 / troy oz

Bear-market continuation. Gold traded mostly between $360 and $415. The Berlin Wall fell on 9 November, but markets were focused on Cold War detente rather than any inflationary risk. The decade ended at ~$401.

Key events that year

  • Nov

    Fall of the Berlin Wall

    Geopolitical de-escalation. Markets viewed the post–Cold War world as deflationary; gold remained range-bound.

The 1970s — gold's break from fiat

On 15 August 1971 President Nixon ended USD convertibility to gold, dismantling the Bretton Woods system. Free-floating gold rose from a Bretton-Woods price of $35/oz to a January 1980 nominal peak near $850/oz. The decade was defined by stagflation, two oil shocks (1973–74 and 1979), Soviet–US tensions, and double-digit US inflation — an environment in which gold became the textbook inflation hedge.

Frequently asked questions

What was the gold price on April 7, 1989?

Historical gold price archives for April 7, 1989. The exact USD price for this date may be unavailable if it fell on a market holiday or weekend.

Why are local-currency conversions not shown for this date?

Reliable historical exchange-rate data only goes back to 1 January 1990. For dates between 1970 and 1989 we display the international XAU/USD spot price (which is the global benchmark) but cannot accurately convert to local currencies (PKR, INR, AED, etc.) without trustworthy historical FX data. For dates from 1990 onwards, country-by-country price tables are available on each daily page.

What was the gold price band in 1989?

In 1989, gold traded approximately in the $356 – $416 range. Bear-market continuation. Gold traded mostly between $360 and $415. The Berlin Wall fell on 9 November, but markets were focused on Cold War detente rather than any inflationary risk. The decade ended at ~$401.

How does Goldify Pro source this data?

Daily XAU/USD spot prices for 1970–present are sourced from gold-api.com, which maintains a continuous historical archive of London gold-fix prices. We display the price at face value with no editorial adjustments.

Was 1970–1989 a good period to own gold?

Gold was an outstanding investment from 1971–1980 (rising from $35 to $850, a 24× return) and a poor one from 1980–1985 (falling to $284). The 1980s as a whole saw gold underperform stocks. The 50-year history page covers the full picture.

Other historical years

Interactive Chart

Full XAU/USD chart since 1970

50-Year History

Full half-century gold story

Live Gold Rates

Today's prices for 100+ countries

Gold Calculators

Tola, gram, karat, polish

Gold in 1989

All ${year} daily prices

Gold Reference Guide

Karats, purity, weight units

Gold price on April 7, 1989: detailed analysis

April 7, 1989 fell on a Friday — the 84th trading session of 310 for 1989. The international XAU/USD spot price closed at an unrecorded level, equivalent to and . This represents the London gold fix benchmark in US dollars; physical gold in any country at the time was sold at this rate plus local taxes, dealer premiums, and currency-conversion costs.

At this point in 1989, gold was -5.37% year-to-date versus the 1 January open of $404.01/oz. The 1-day move from the prior session was -0.55%. Across the trailing trading week the price moved -2.40%. Over the prior ~30 trading sessions, gold moved -2.70%.

Within 1989's observed range — a low of $355.80/oz and a high of $423.90/oz — this date sat at roughly the 39th percentile. That places the day in the lower-middle of the year's price band.

Historical archives like this one are useful for several purposes: settling estate valuations and inheritance calculations involving gold purchased decades ago, researching the long-term performance of gold as an asset class, understanding the impact of major historical events (oil shocks, Cold War flashpoints, monetary policy shifts), and for academic study of the post–Bretton-Woods era.

We display data with no editorial markup. The XAU/USD price for this date comes from gold-api.com, which maintains continuous London-fix records back to the start of free-floating gold in 1971. Per-gram and per-tola figures are calculated using the fixed conversion of 1 troy ounce = 31.1035 grams, and 1 tola = 11.664 grams.

For full country-by-country price tables (24K, 22K, 21K, 18K per tola/gram in 100+ local currencies), visit any date from 1990 onwards. For an interactive chart of the entire gold-price history since 1970, see our 50-year analysis page. And for today's live rate in your country, check live rates here.

Disclaimer: This page is for informational and historical-research purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Prices shown are international XAU/USD spot reference figures; actual physical-market prices in any country at the time may have varied due to local taxes, premiums, and currency-conversion factors.