Business
Silver Prices Sink Sharply To Rs 2.25 Lakh/Kg On MCX, Log Biggest One-Day Fall In 4 Years; Know Why
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Silver is the big mover in trade overnight. Prices have finally stabilised after slumping 8.7% in the biggest one-day fall since August 2020
Silver Prices Fall
Silver Prices Crash: Silver is the big mover in trade overnight. Prices have finally stabilised after slumping 8.7% in the biggest one-day fall since August 2020. In fact, the year-end is proving to be highly volatile for silver. On MCX too, silver prices plunged to the Rs 2.25 lakh/kg level from a high of Rs 2.54 lakh/kg.
Most analysts believe that this correction in prices may have helped bring down some of the speculative trade in silver.
Let us look at the price rates of silver in different cities of India
Prices in India correct in sync with global trend
MCX silver prices generally follow global silver prices, moving in line with COMEX trends and currency changes.
Currently, silver prices in India are down 0.04%, with one kg trading at Rs 2,33,480/kg, while the price of 10 gram silver today is Rs 2,334.80.
For city-wise rates, the white metal is trading at Rs 233.76 per gram in Mumbai, followed by Delhi, where the silver rate is Rs 223.21 per gram, which is Rs 10.27 lower than the silver rate in Mumbai.
The silver rate in Chennai is Rs 224.25 per gram, while the silver rate in Hyderabad is Rs 223.95 per gram. The silver rate in Ahmedabad is Rs 223.89 per gram.
These differences in city-wise prices mainly arise from local taxes, transportation costs and demand levels.
So what exactly is driving these prices? Let’s take a look at the key triggers for the sharp correction in silver prices:
1. Aggressive profit booking
Analysts added that aggressive profit booking by traders led to a crash in the prices of the white metal. Traders sold silver to lock in gains as prices had spiked. Further, trading volumes in the markets are relatively low because of the holiday season, which made silver rally higher than usual.
Commenting on the volatility, Jigar Trivedi, Senior Research Analyst at Reliance Securities, said, “Silver rose 2.6% to $73.9/oz, stabilizing after a steep drop in the previous session, as traders adjusted positions following aggressive profit-taking. The rebound follows a sharp retreat from record highs above $80 an ounce, with holiday-thinned liquidity amplifying recent price swings.”
2. CME raises margins
Margin costs raised by the CME Group compelled traders to reduce their market positions, triggering a sell-off. The exchange hiked margins for the March 2026 derivatives contract to $25,000 from $20,000 earlier.
This essentially means traders now have to pay more to keep their contracts. Often, margin hikes are used by exchanges as a risk-control tool to manage volatility.
“Stricter margin rules may keep price gains measured in the short term. MCX Silver March may appreciate to Rs 226,000/kg as the undertone is bullish in the international markets,” Trivedi added.
3. Easing geopolitical tensions
The meeting between US President Donald Trump and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has eased geopolitical tensions between Russia and Ukraine, as both leaders said an end to the war is close. The Ukrainian president views the peace plans as 90% agreed following talks with Trump.
Easing geopolitical tensions ultimately reduce safe-haven demand for precious metals, thereby lowering demand.
Silver rally: Next target?
According to MOSL, silver price rally is rooted in real metal scarcity and is not just speculative.
It explained that beyond supply constraints, sustained industrial and investment demand has reinforced silver’s price strength. Its growing use in electronics, renewable energy and other technology-driven sectors has ensured steady industrial offtake, while investors have increasingly viewed silver as a strategic hedge amid macroeconomic uncertainty.
Navneet Damani and Manav Modi, Commodities Analyst at MOSL noted, “Silver’s 2025 rally is being shaped by real metal scarcity rather than speculative positioning. Physical deficits, policy-driven supply restrictions, and concentrated inventories are increasingly dictating prices, signalling a durable shift in how the silver market is priced and traded.”
From an investment perspective, MOSL said it continues to maintain a buy-on-dips approach with a staggered investment strategy. While its initial target of $75 on COMEX has already been achieved, the brokerage reiterated its next target of $77 on COMEX, equivalent to around Rs 2,46,000 in the domestic market. Any further revisions to this outlook, the report noted, will depend on how supply dynamics, inventory trends and policy developments evolve over time.
December 30, 2025, 10:52 IST
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Business
Without Rera data, real estate reform risks losing credibility: Homebuyers’ body – The Times of India
New Delhi: More than 75% of state real estate regulators, Reras, have either never published annual reports, discontinued their publication or not updated them despite statutory obligation and directions from the housing and urban affairs ministry, claimed homebuyers’ body FPCE on Friday. It released status report of 21 Reras as of Feb 13.The availability of updated annual reports is crucial as these contain details of data on performance of Reras, including project completion status categorised by timely completion, completion with extensions, and incomplete projects. The ministry’s format for publishing these reports also specifies providing details such as actual execution status of refund, possession and compensation orders as well as recovery warrant execution details with values and list of defaulting builders.FPCE said annual report data is not only vital for homebuyers to assess system credibility, but is equally necessary for both state and central govts to frame effective policies, design incentivisation schemes, and develop tax policy frameworks.“Unless we have credible data proving that after Rera the real estate sector has improved in terms of delivery, fairness, and keeping its promises, we are merely firing in the air,” said FPCE president Abhay Upadhyay, who is also a member of the govt’s Central Advisory Council on Rera.As per details shared by the entity, seven states — Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, West Bengal, Andhra Pradesh, Himachal Pradesh and Goa — have never published a single annual report since Rera’s implementation, and nine states, including Maharashtra, Uttar Pradesh and Telangana, which initially published reports, have discontinued the practice.Upadhyay said when regulators themselves don’t follow the law, they lose the legal right to demand compliance from other stakeholders. “Their failure emboldens builders and weakens the very system they are meant to safeguard,” he said.
Business
Infosys Rolls Out 85% Average Performance Bonus In Q3FY26, Best In Over 3 Years
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Over recent quarters, payouts had gradually improved from roughly 65 percent to 80 percent and now to an average of about 85 percent in Q3FY26.

Infosys logo is seen.
IT major Infosys rolled out performance bonus payouts averaging around 85 percent for the quarter ended December 31, 2025 (Q3FY26), marking the strongest variable pay outcome for eligible employees in at least the past three-and-a-half years, Moneycontrol reported citing people in the know.
The bonus payout for mid- to junior-level employees ranges between 75 percent and 100 percent, with most employees clustering around the organisation-wide average of 85 percent, the report said. The development signals a steady recovery in variable compensation at the Bengaluru-headquartered IT services firm. Over recent quarters, payouts had gradually improved from roughly 65 percent to 80 percent and now to an average of about 85 percent in Q3FY26.
Employees are expected to receive their bonus letters over the next few days, with the payout scheduled to be credited along with their February salary.
One employee told the outlet that it is the strongest bonus outcome seen in recent years. The payout is also among the rare instances since the Covid-19 period when variable pay has approached the upper end of the eligible range.
Infosys last paid out 100 percent variable compensation during the pandemic. In the quarters that followed, payouts were lower amid macroeconomic uncertainty and a broader slowdown in client spending across global markets.
The higher payout comes at a time when global IT stocks have faced renewed pressure, driven by concerns over rapid advances in artificial intelligence and their potential impact on traditional IT services models.
Shares of global IT firms have seen sharp sell-offs in recent weeks amid heightened investor focus on AI leaders such as Anthropic. Investors fear that generative AI tools could compress pricing, automate routine services work and reduce demand for legacy outsourcing models.
Against that backdrop, the improved bonus payout at Infosys is being viewed as a signal of operational resilience and near-term performance strength, even as sentiment around the broader IT sector remains cautious.
February 13, 2026, 21:44 IST
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Business
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