Business
Gold prices in Pakistan Today – October 30, 2025 | The Express Tribune
In 2006-07, a 1 percent withholding tax was imposed on commercial imports of gold in the country. Photo: Express News
Gold prices declined in both international and local markets on Thursday as demand weakened following a brief rise a day earlier.
In the international bullion market, the price of gold fell by $10 per ounce, reaching $3,965, which led to a downward adjustment in domestic rates.
In Pakistan’s local markets, the price of 24-carat gold dropped by Rs1,000 per tola, settling at Rs418,862, while the price of 10 grams of gold decreased by Rs857, closing at Rs359,106.
In contrast, silver prices remained unchanged, with per tola silver steady at Rs5,034 and 10 grams holding firm at Rs4,315, according to local jewellers.
Spot gold climbed 1.9% to $4,004.75 per ounce as of 0918 GMT. U.S. gold futures for December delivery slipped 0.4% to $4,018.30 per ounce.
Elsewhere, spot silver rose 1.4% to $48.22 per ounce, platinum gained 2% to $1,616.20 and palladium climbed 2.9% to $1,441.24.
Read: Gold jumps by Rs3,500, rupee remains steady
Earlier on Wednesday, gold prices in Pakistan recorded a significant rise, driven by persistent global uncertainties and cautious investor sentiment ahead of key international developments.
According to data released by the All-Pakistan Gems and Jewellers Sarafa Association (APGJSA), the price of 24-karat gold surged by Rs3,500 per tola, reaching Rs419,862. Similarly, the rate for 10 grams of 24-karat gold rose by Rs3,000 to Rs359,963, while 10 grams of 22-karat gold climbed by Rs2,751 to Rs329,978.
The upward movement in local bullion prices reflected global trends, as gold gained $35 in the international market to settle at $3,975 per ounce. The rally in precious metals persisted as investors sought safe-haven assets amid heightened geopolitical tensions and awaited key policy cues from the US Federal Reserve.
Silver prices also advanced, with 24-karat silver rising by Rs110 to Rs5,034 per tola.
Business
Air travel now runs on code: Inside the tech backbone reshaping airports – The Times of India
MUMBAI: As the global air travel industry becomes larger and more complex with each passing decade, airlines and airports are increasingly moving towards digitisation. From printed paper tickets that came in airline jackets, to home-printed e-tickets, to today’s digital boarding passes on mobile phones; from conventional check-in and immigration counters to biometric gates; and from local storage of information to cloud-hosted passenger systems, digitisation has transformed every stage of the passenger journey.One of the most closely watched developments is unfolding at Paris Charles de Gaulle Airport (CDG), where a trial is under way to use computer vision and biometrics to identify and track checked baggage. The system captures a bag’s “biometrics” or digital signature through high-resolution imaging and AI-driven pattern recognition, reducing reliance on printed tags. The AI-driven system makes it easier to track bags that go errant, especially at mega transfer hubs. If successful, this could cut sharply into the US$5 billion in annual losses the aviation industry suffers from mishandled baggage, losses borne largely by airlines, Sumesh Patel, SITA President for Asia Pacific said in an interview with TOI. The trial also marks a turning point: “For any such technology to be effective, every stakeholder has to step up—airlines, airports, and ground handlers,” Patel said. “Airlines must integrate new baggage platforms, airports must install advanced imaging cameras across conveyor systems, and backend applications must be synchronised to handle massive real-time data,” he said, adding that he expects the adoption timeline to be under a decade, which is much faster than the past tech cycles.Auto-reflight: Lost bags now rebook themselvesA companion technology already in commercial use is auto-reflight, currently being used by Lufthansa. Lost bags are automatically matched to the next logical flight using AI, without waiting for human intervention, Patel said, adding that Lufthansa now processes around 70% of its missed bags through auto-reflight. The feature could be especially impactful in large global hubs such as London Heathrow, Frankfurt, Dubai, Doha, where tight connections and high transfer loads drive most baggage mishandling, he said. Whether Indian carriers adopt it may depend less on domestic volumes and more on their exposure to such transit hubs. “If a carrier’s major hub adopts the solution, the airline would be keen to participate,” Patel noted. Some airlines are also experimenting with auto-notification, where passengers are alerted the moment a bag is confirmed missing. For Qantas, the first rollout sent notifications during flight, unintentionally overwhelming cabin crew with questions. The system now alerts passengers only when they step off the aircraft.India’s aviation growth is forcing a digital leapIndia, meanwhile, is undertaking one of the world’s largest aviation digitisation programmes. The country has the world’s largest airport cloud-enabled platform that handles passenger processing across its 61 private and govt-owned airports, a digital backbone that handles tasks like conventional check-in and biometrics enabled DigiYatra check-in along with other jobs like baggage processing, passenger identity documentation etc. The 61 airports include 50 govt-run Airports Authority of India (AAI) airports. The programme is part of AAI’s shift to a unified, cloud-based platform that will modernise passenger and baggage processing at its airports. More than 3,500 touchpoints are planned, giving smaller airports the same scalable, technology-driven capabilities as larger ones, said Patel.Unlike other markets where individual airports drive adoption, making for a fragmented adoption, India’s change is being led system-wide as AAI is govt-owned while DigiYatra is a govt-backed initiative. Even conventional check-in counters across dozens of airports now run fully on cloud, enabling uniform upgrades, faster deployment, and real-time data access.India has the third largest domestic aviation market in the world, the country handled 411 million passengers last year (including international passengers) and contributes USD 53 billion to GDP through aviation. With new airports like Navi Mumbai and Jewar designed as digital-first terminals, cloud-enabled operations, biometrics, automated baggage systems, and integrated resource management are becoming foundational. At Navi Mumbai International Airport, for instance, 22 automated self-bag-drop units will enable touch-free processing from Day One.Learning from global IT outagesThe industry’s dependence on digital infrastructure also means outages hurt more than ever. From the global CrowdStrike-triggered disruption to local fibre cuts, the causes vary widely making prediction difficult. Patel emphasises the need for redundant systems like ‘Local DCS’, which act as on-site fallbacks if main airline systems disconnect. Singapore mandates such backups under its Critical Information Infrastructure (CII) framework. Patel said more governments may eventually follow.Airlines, too, are adapting. After IndiGo’s extensive early-December disruptions, the carrier announced more proactive passenger notifications last week and revised processes to prevent passengers from arriving at airports without clarity on delayed or cancelled flights. “The data is always there; it’s about how quickly processes evolve in response,” Patel said.The passenger is changing — fastSITA’s Passenger IT Insights reveal a striking trend: the world’s travellers are no longer dominated by frequent flyers. The fastest-growing cohorts are first-time or occasional flyers and older travellers, a shift visible across Europe, Asia, and North America. These passengers place a premium on clarity, trust, and convenience driving demand for biometrics, simpler check-ins, and real-time baggage visibility, according to the survey.Sanjeev K, SITA, VP Asia Pacific said the shift in passenger profiles globally has made digital adoption a critical focus. India and South Asia are witnessing rapid uptake of mobile and digital services, comparable in some ways to China’s advanced digital payment and app-driven ecosystem, he said, adding that passengers who may not be highly literate or familiar with airport processes are still adapting quickly when technology is made simple, visual and intuitive, often through formats similar to short social-media videos. “Older travellers gain confidence and a sense of accomplishment when they adopt the new technology,” he said. “older passengers are now comfortable with digital tools in their daily lives whether banking, messaging or other services. The initial difficulty lies mainly in understanding airport processes during a first trip. To bridge that gap SITA works closely with airports to ensure support systems are available to guide travellers through steps like using Digi Yatra, kiosks or self-bag drops,” he said. He added that any new technology involves a learning curve, and the aim is to make that first experience stress-free by providing timely assistance so that, after one or two uses, the process becomes second nature to passengers. Patel said that airlines and airports plan to invest USD 8.9 billion and USD 37 billion, respectively, in digital and biometric systems globally. The goal is a frictionless, self-service journey from curb to boarding. The long-term roadmap envisions a world where passengers check in once, digitally, and use that identity throughout their journey: at border control, retail, boarding, and baggage retrieval.
Business
Bhavish Aggarwal Partially Sells Ola Electric Stake After Stock Slump; Analysts Flag Weak Fundamentals
Last Updated:
Ola Electric Share Price: Exchange filings show Aggarwal sold about 2.6 cr shares via bulk deal, resulting in reduction in his shareholding
Ola Electric Share Price.
Ola Electric Share Price: The sharp decline in Ola Electric Mobility Ltd’s share price may have prompted founder Bhavish Aggarwal to sell a portion of his stake, with analysts noting that the company’s weak operating performance continues to offer little support to the stock.
Shares of the electric two-wheeler maker are trading at a record low of around Rs 35, down more than 50 percent from the issue price of Rs 76 and sharply lower from a peak of about Rs 150. The stock has fallen nearly 60 percent so far in 2025.
Exchange filings show Aggarwal sold about 2.6 crore shares through a bulk deal on Tuesday, December 16, resulting in a reduction in his shareholding. The sale was linked to the repayment of a personal loan of around Rs 260 crore, raised to fund his artificial intelligence venture, Krutrim AI. To secure the loan, Aggarwal had pledged a portion of his Ola Electric shares with lenders, including Axis Trustee and Aditya Birla.
Analysts said the sale likely helped address risks linked to pledged shares at a time when the stock continued to hit fresh lows. Pledged holdings are typically vulnerable to margin calls during steep price declines, which can lead to forced selling, though the precise trigger for the transaction was not disclosed.
Sunny Agrawal, head of fundamental equity research at SBICAPS, said the release of pledged shares removes a key overhang on the stock, particularly the risk of further sell-offs linked to margin calls. With that pressure now addressed, investor focus shifts back to the company’s underlying business performance, which is only getting weaker, he said.
Analysts said Ola Electric’s core electric scooter business continues to struggle, with volumes yet to scale meaningfully and competition intensifying. The company’s market share in electric scooters has fallen to around 18 percent from roughly 45 percent at the time of its listing, which analysts cited as a key concern.
Some analysts noted that Ola Electric has been developing additional business verticals, including battery cell manufacturing, which could serve both its own vehicles and other automotive segments. Whether these initiatives can offset weakness in the core scooter business will depend on product execution, customer response, and scalability, they said.
Rajesh Palviya of Axis Securities said the stock is trading at an all-time low and that any rebound, if it occurs, is likely to be driven by near-term news flow rather than a fundamental turnaround. The technical setup remains weak, and investors are likely to wait for confirmation through quarterly earnings before reassessing the stock, he said.
Ola Electric said the transaction was a one-time and limited monetisation by the founder at a personal level to repay a promoter-level loan of Rs 260 crore. Following the repayment, all previously pledged shares, representing about 3.93 percent of the company’s equity, will be released. The promoter group will continue to hold around 34 percent of the company, with no change in promoter control or long-term commitment, the company said.
Independent analyst Jayant Mundhra said pledged shares pose heightened risks during sharp stock price declines, as lenders may issue margin calls that lead to selling in the open market. He said that risk was present as Ola Electric’s shares continued to slide and has now been addressed following the transaction.
December 17, 2025, 13:12 IST
Read More
Business
Rupee rebounds! Currency recovers on likely RBI intervention after opening at 91.07 vs US dollar; biggest single-day gain in 7 months – The Times of India
Rupee stayed under pressure on Wednesday, opening at a record low of 91.07 against the US dollar, down 0.05% from its previous close, before clawing back part of its losses, likely supported by intervention from the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), Reuters reported.The central bank stepped in aggressively after the currency hit record lows for four straight sessions, triggering its strongest intraday recovery in about seven months. The rupee had been weighed down by sustained portfolio outflows and an ongoing stalemate in US–India trade talks.After opening near 91.07, the rupee rebounded sharply, rising to an intraday high of 89.75 on the interbank order matching system from levels close to 91 seen before the intervention.
Market participants noted that Wednesday’s intervention mirrored RBI actions in October and November, when it stepped in on multiple occasions to curb one-way moves in the currency.Earlier on Tuesday, the domestic currency breached the 91-per-dollar mark for the first time during intraday trade, touching an all-time low of 91.14 before recovering partially to close 15 paise weaker at 90.93. Traders said the decline came despite weakness in the US dollar and a sharp fall in global crude oil prices.Rupee has been under sustained stress in recent sessions. It slipped past the 90-per-dollar level on Monday and has hit fresh record lows for the third straight session, driven by concerns over a prolonged deadlock in India–US trade talks and persistent portfolio outflows. Over the past 10 trading sessions, the currency has fallen from around 90 to 91 against the dollar, losing nearly 1% in just the last five sessions. Traders said the period was marked by strong dollar demand and a disconnect between the rupee and other Asian currencies, alongside growing interest in speculative short positions.So far this year, the rupee is among the worst-performing global currencies, down about 6% against the greenback. A widening trade deficit, punitive 50% US tariffs and steady investment outflows have pushed the currency to record lows near the 91 level.
-
Politics6 days agoTrump launches gold card programme for expedited visas with a $1m price tag
-
Business7 days agoRivian turns to AI, autonomy to woo investors as EV sales stall
-
Tech1 week agoJennifer Lewis ScD ’91: “Can we make tissues that are made from you, for you?”
-
Business4 days agoHitting The ‘High Notes’ In Ties: Nepal Set To Lift Ban On Indian Bills Above ₹100
-
Tech7 days agoGoogle DeepMind partners with UK government to deliver AI | Computer Weekly
-
Sports6 days agoU.S. House passes bill to combat stadium drones
-
Sports6 days agoPolice detain Michigan head football coach Sherrone Moore after firing, salacious details emerge: report
-
Fashion6 days agoTommy Hilfiger appoints Sergio Pérez as global menswear ambassador
