गृहपृष्ठ ∕ Business ∕ Price of yellow metal goes down by Rs 1,600 per tola Business Price of yellow metal goes down by Rs 1,600 per tola KathmanduPati November 23, 2021 KATHMANDU – The price of yellow metal has decreased by Rs 1,600 per tola in Nepali market today. The hallmark gold is being traded at Rs 92,300 per tola today against Rs 93,900 yesterday. According to Nepal Federation of Gold and Silver Entrepreneurs’ Association, the price of worked gold has been determined at Rs 91,800 while it was 93,400 on Monday. Similarly, the price of silver has gone down by Rs 15 per tola and being traded at Rs 1,255 per tola today, according to the Federation. Write your comments RELATED NEWS Existing Constitution doesn’t recognise monarchy: Lawmaker Pant Women Leadership Summit 2025: PM Oli calls for bringing positive… HoR Session: Lawmakers express objection to lifelong benefits to former… Fire at Syuchatar perishes property worth Rs 1.5 million Rs 4 billion collected in revenue from realty business in… Expenditure exceeds income, but dev spending only at 23 per… Top Headlines Scrutinizing Relevance of Prithivi Narayan Shah´s Thoughts and Strategy1 Relevance of Prithivi Narayan Shah in Contemporary Nepal2 Photo exhibition at Nepal Army Headquarters3 NA team sets out on Gorakha-Kathmandu march to promote ‘unification route’4 Ncell is the FIRST Nepali Telecom Company to receive ISO 27001 and ISO 27701 certifications for information security and data privacy5 PM Oli, Sri Lankan’s former President meet6 PM Oli extends New Year greetings7 Gold price ups Rs 2,000 per tola8 TRENDING This time’s Teej, social distancing please! Govt Making Preparations to Reduce the Tenure of Armed Police Force’s IG to Three Years Kulman Ghising’s reappointment issue stirs conflict between Prime Minister Oli, Energy Minister Pun Green recovery: An urgency NC work execution committee meeting tomorrow US presidential candidate Biden picks Kamala Harris as running mate West Jajarkot locals demand law and order Indian RAW Chief Goel meets Prime Minister Oli after coming to Nepal from Bhutan