Historical Archive · XAU/USD · Saturday

Gold Price on July 22, 1989

International gold spot price for Saturday, July 22, 1989— sourced from gold-api.com's continuous historical archive of London gold fixings.

XAU / USD

$372.40

per troy ounce

USD / Gram

$11.973

1 gram

USD / Tola

$139.65

11.664 grams

All unit conversions for July 22, 1989

UnitWeightUSD price
Troy ounce31.1035 g$372.40
Gram1.0000 g$11.973
10 grams10 g$119.73
Kilogram1,000 g$11,972.93
Tola11.664 g$139.65
Pavan≈ 7.776 g$93.10
All non-ounce values derived from $372.40/oz using fixed weight constants (1 oz = 31.1035 g; 1 tola = 11.664 g; 1 pavan ≈ 7.776 g). Pure metal value only — excludes local taxes, dealer premiums and making charges.

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 July 22, 1989?

On July 22, 1989, the international XAU/USD spot price closed at approximately $372.40 per troy ounce, equivalent to $11.973 per gram and $139.65 per tola. Source: gold-api.com historical archives.

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 July 22, 1989: detailed analysis

July 22, 1989 fell on a Saturday. The international XAU/USD spot price closed at $372.40/oz, equivalent to $11.973/gram and $139.65/tola. 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.

Within 1989's observed range — a low of $355.80/oz and a high of $423.90/oz — this date sat at roughly the 24th 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.