United States · USD · Sunday, June 1, 2008

Gold Price in United StatesJune 1, 2008

On June 1, 2008, gold in United States closed at approximately $889 per troy ounce — about $334 per tola or $29 per gram. The figure is computed from the verified international XAU/USD spot price ($889.49/oz) × the day's USD/USD exchange rate.

USD / Troy Ounce

$889

31.1035 g

USD / Gram

$29

1 g

USD / Tola

$334

11.664 g

All unit prices on June 1, 2008United States

UnitWeightUSD price
Troy ounce31.1035 g$889
Gram1.0000 g$29
10 grams10 g$286
Kilogram1,000 g$28,598
Tola11.664 g$334
Computed from XAU/USD ($889.49/oz) × the day's USD/USD rate (1). Pure metal value only — excludes local taxes, dealer making charges, and any retail mark-up.

Karat-purity breakdown — June 1, 2008

KaratPer gramPer 10gPer tola
24K$29$286$333
22K$26$262$306
21K$25$250$292
18K$21$214$250
14KUNITED STATES STD$17$167$195
10K$12$119$139

Surrounding ±15 trading days — USD

31 sessions
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Daily USD-equivalent gold price for the trading sessions surrounding June 1, 2008. Useful for spotting whether this date sat at a local high, local low, or mid-range within the broader trend. The chart applies the same FX rate (1) consistently across the window.

Price action on June 1, 2008

1-day move

+0.42%

vs prior session

7-day move

-4.10%

rolling week

30-day move

+2.44%

rolling month

YTD

-0.01%

since 1 Jan 2008

Calendar position

Day 153 of 366

Trading day

132nd of 316

Position in 2008's range

55% (low $712.50 → high $1,032.85)

The United States gold market

The US retail gold market quotes per troy ounce for bullion and per pennyweight or gram for jewellery. 14K is the most common jewellery purity. Most states impose sales tax on jewellery; several (including Texas, Florida, and Washington) exempt investment-grade bullion above defined thresholds. The COMEX gold futures contract on CME Group is the single most-watched price reference globally.

Standard quote unit

troy ounce

Common purity

14K

Currency

USD ($)

June 1 in other years — United States

June 1, 2008 gold price in other countries

How this June 1, 2008 United States price is calculated

International benchmark. The XAU/USD spot price for June 1, 2008 comes from gold-api.com's historical archive — the London PM-fix benchmark, which is the reference used by central banks and bullion dealers globally. On this date, that price was $889.49/oz.

Currency conversion. The USD/USD exchange rate for the same date comes from exchangerate-api.com. We apply that day's exact rate (1) to the USD price — not a year-average or month-end approximation. This makes the $ figure on this page accurate to the trading session.

Per-unit math. Per-gram = per-ounce ÷ 31.1035. Per-tola = per-gram × 11.664. Per-10g = per-gram × 10. Per-kilo = per-gram × 1000. Karat values multiply per-gram by the purity ratio (24K = 0.999, 22K = 0.916, 21K = 0.875, 18K = 0.750, 14K = 0.585, 10K = 0.417). We never compound rounding errors by going through intermediate units.

What this page does NOT include. Local sales tax / VAT, customs duty on imports, dealer making charges, jewellery design premiums, or coin numismatic premiums. To go from this pure-metal value to a final retail rate in United States, add the country-specific levies described in the “United States gold market” section above. The retail rate at a jeweller in United States on June 1, 2008 would have been a few percent above this number once those costs are included.

FAQ — United States gold price on June 1, 2008

What was the gold price in United States on June 1, 2008?

On June 1, 2008 (Sunday), gold in United States traded at approximately $889 per troy ounce. That works out to about $29 per gram, $334 per tola, and $286 per 10 grams. The figure is derived from international XAU/USD spot of $889.49/oz × the day's USD/USD exchange rate of 1.

What was the 24K gold rate per tola in United States on June 1, 2008?

The 24K gold rate per tola in United States on June 1, 2008 was approximately $333 (99.9% pure metal value). This excludes local taxes, dealer making charges and any country-specific levies — those add on top to produce the final retail rate.

What was the 14K gold rate in United States on June 1, 2008?

United States's most-quoted retail standard is 14K per troy ounce. On June 1, 2008, that pure-metal value was approximately $17. Add country-specific taxes and making charges (see the market-context section above) for the final retail rate.

How accurate is this number versus what jewellers were quoting?

The $ figure on this page is the verified international XAU/USD spot price for June 1, 2008 multiplied by the day's exchange rate. It represents the pure metal value at international parity — what a London-fix benchmark would have implied. Local jewellers add (1) import duties + sales tax / VAT, (2) dealer making charges (typically 3–12% of metal value), and (3) any premium for purity certification. Final retail rates in United States typically sit a few percent above this number.

Was June 1, 2008 a trading day?

Yes — June 1, 2008 was the 132nd trading session of 316 for 2008 on the international gold market. Sundays are typically active trading days unless they fall on a major holiday.

Want today's rate in United States? See live gold prices in United States with minute-by-minute updates and full karat breakdowns. To compare this archive figure against the live rate, that's where to go.

Different unit on this same date? The USD-only daily archive for June 1, 2008 includes per-day prices in 100+ other currencies and is the canonical reference page for this date.

Browse the archive. Step through every day of June 2008 in United States, see the full 2008 archive, or use our tola, gram and karat calculators for live calculations against today's rate.

Disclaimer: Historical gold prices on this page reflect the international XAU/USD spot price for the requested date, converted to USD at the same day's exchange rate. They are intended for informational and educational use only and do not constitute investment advice or a price quote for buying or selling physical gold today. Always verify current local rates with a reputable bullion dealer in United States before transacting.