GLD

SPDR Gold Shares ETF Price

Closed
GLD
$413.82
-$3.17(-0.76%)

*Data last updated: 2026-05-25 05:24 (UTC+8)

As of 2026-05-25 05:24, SPDR Gold Shares ETF (GLD) is priced at $413.82, with a total market cap of $150.34B, a P/E ratio of 0.00, and a dividend yield of 0.00%. Today, the stock price fluctuated between $412.00 and $416.46. The current price is 0.44% above the day's low and 0.63% below the day's high, with a trading volume of 5.49M. Over the past 52 weeks, GLD has traded between $299.89 to $509.70, and the current price is -18.81% away from the 52-week high.

GLD Key Stats

Yesterday's Close$416.99
Market Cap$150.34B
Volume5.49M
P/E Ratio0.00
Dividend Yield (TTM)0.00%
Net Income (FY)$0.00
Revenue (FY)$0.00
Earnings Date2023-03-31
Revenue Estimate$0.00
Shares Outstanding360.53M
Beta (1Y)0.16

About GLD

The investment objective of SPDR Gold Trust (the "Trust") is for the shares to reflect the performance of the price of gold bullion, less the Trust's expensesThe first US traded gold ETF and the first US-listed ETF backed by a physical assetFor many investors, the costs associated with buying GLD shares in the secondary market and the payment of the Trust's ongoing expenses may be lower than the costs associated with buying, storing and insuring physical gold in a traditional allocated gold bullion account
SectorFinancial Services
IndustryAsset Management
HeadquartersNew York City,None,US

Learn More about SPDR Gold Shares ETF (GLD)

SPDR Gold Shares ETF (GLD) FAQ

What's the stock price of SPDR Gold Shares ETF (GLD) today?

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SPDR Gold Shares ETF (GLD) is currently trading at $413.82, with a 24h change of -0.76%. The 52-week trading range is $299.89–$509.70.

What are the 52-week high and low prices for SPDR Gold Shares ETF (GLD)?

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Risk Warning

The stock market involves a high level of risk and price volatility. The value of your investment may increase or decrease, and you may not recover the full amount invested. Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future results. Before making any investment decisions, you should carefully assess your investment experience, financial situation, investment objectives, and risk tolerance, and conduct your own research. Where appropriate, consult an independent financial adviser.

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Hot Posts About SPDR Gold Shares ETF (GLD)

User_any

User_any

16 hours ago
🔹 Gold Just Crushed Every Tokenized Commodity $5 billion and 99.8 percent market share. Tokenized gold now dominates the entire onchain commodity market. Silver, oil, and agricultural tokens barely register on the same chart. 🔹 The Market Breakdown Total tokenized gold value: $5 billion. All other tokenized commodities combined: under $60 million. Gold’s share of the tokenized commodity sector: 99.8 percent. Silver tokenization sits at roughly $28 million. The tokenized iShares Gold Trust holds about $14 million. Every other commodity category together accounts for less than $3 million. 🔹 Why Gold Runs Alone Gold already moves across borders without friction. The market has relied on paper certificates for decades, not physical bar shipment. That makes gold the natural fit for blockchain mapping. Tether XAUT and Paxos PAXG simply turn vault ownership into wallet balances. Oil, wheat, copper, and lithium do not work the same way. Physical delivery, quality grading, and storage logistics remain unsolved at scale. 🔹 The Growth Curve December 2024: tokenized gold market cap below $1.5 billion. May 2026: $5 billion. One month in early 2026 alone saw a single month climb of over 35 percent. Monthly onchain transfer volume across gold tokens now exceeds $13 billion. Tokenized gold grew faster in one quarter than most crypto sectors grow in a year. 🔹 Trading Volume Speaks Louder Q1 2026 spot trading volume for tokenized gold reached $90.7 billion. That number already beats the full year volume of 2025. Full year 2025 trading hit $178 billion, a 1,550 percent increase from 2024. Q4 2025 turnover topped $126 billion, surpassing the combined activity of the five largest traditional gold ETFs. Only SPDR Gold Shares (GLD) posted higher quarterly volume at $375 billion. Tokenized gold now ranks as the second largest gold investment product by volume on the planet. 🔹 The Two Giants XAUT and PAXG together control 89 percent of the tokenized gold market. Tether XAUT leads with roughly $2.5 billion in market cap, backed by over 375,000 ounces of LBMA-certified gold stored in Swiss vaults. That represents more than 12.7 metric tons of physical metal. Paxos PAXG holds about $2 billion in market value, regulated under the New York Department of Financial Services. PAXG market share climbed from 36.8 percent to 41.8 percent in early 2026. Kinesis Gold (KAU) and Matrixdock Gold make up most of the remaining share. The top four control nearly 97 percent of the entire category. 🔹 Who Is Holding Unique wallet holders grew nearly 200 percent in 2025, adding roughly 115,000 new users. That is 14 times faster than the previous year's growth rate. Tokenized assets including gold now capture $34 billion in total market value excluding stablecoins, climbing from under $3 billion in mid-2024. US Treasuries lead the broader RWA market at $15.2 billion, but gold dominates the commodity side by an overwhelming margin. 🔹 Regulation Unlocked the Door The US GENIUS Act passed in July 2025, giving stablecoins and tokenized assets a clear legal foundation. The EU's MiCA framework classifies tokenized gold as an Asset Referenced Token, requiring 100 percent physical backing and quarterly reserve audits. Final authorization deadline arrives July 1, 2026. Singapore’s Project Guardian advances institutional tokenization with over 40 financial institutions participating. OCBC Bank launched GOLDX, a tokenized gold fund on Ethereum and Solana targeting institutional clients. 🔹 The DeFi Gap Only 5 percent of tokenized gold supply actually enters DeFi protocols. Most holders simply keep the tokens in wallets without using them as collateral or yield-generating assets. That 5 percent is the next frontier. When tokenized gold integrates fully into lending and trading protocols, the use case expands from holding to programmable money. 🔹 The Three Waves Grayscale defines the tokenization timeline. Wave one: stablecoins. Completed. Wave two: gold and treasuries. Currently in rapid expansion. Wave three: equities and private credit. Expected 2026 to 2027 as regulatory frameworks mature. Gold anchors the second wave. 🔹 The Forecast Projections place the global gold tokenization market at $38.9 billion by 2031, growing at a 54.66 percent compound annual rate. The broader tokenized RWA market could reach $18 trillion by 2031. This is not a trend. This is financial infrastructure being rebuilt in real time. $5 billion today. $38 billion by 2031. Gold is leading the biggest asset migration in financial history. Watch the wallets stack. #GateSquare #TokenizedGold #RWAs #XAUT #PAXG
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PaperHandSister

PaperHandSister

05-20 17:29
Recently, many people have been asking where to buy gold at the best price, so I organized my own investment notes and shared the pros and cons of five gold investment channels. To be honest, gold has indeed become popular as a safe-haven asset in recent years. Starting from 2024, gold prices have hit new highs, with the net purchase of gold by global central banks reaching 1,045 tons, directly pushing the gold price above $2,700. By 2025, it’s even more exaggerated, with an annual increase of 64.72%, and the highest soaring to $5,600. However, it’s important to note that many factors influence gold prices, and short-term trends are really hard to predict. My own strategy is this: if you want to hold gold long-term for preservation, the key is to find good entry points and not wait until prices go up to start buying. For long-term holding, consider physical gold, gold savings accounts, or gold ETFs. But if you want to make quick money and are willing to take risks, short-term swing trading is more suitable, where gold futures and contracts for difference (CFDs) come into play. Where to buy gold really depends on your investment purpose. Let me start with physical gold. If you’re aiming for inflation hedging and preservation, buying gold bars directly from banks is safer, such as Maybank, Public Bank, HSBC, RHB Bank in Malaysia. In the U.S., there are JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, Wells Fargo, etc. In Hong Kong, HSBC and Hang Seng Bank are options. But remember, physical gold has poor liquidity, costs money to store, and transaction fees are high (1%–5%), making it less suitable for frequent trading. If you don’t want to hold physical gold, a gold savings account is a good compromise. Banks store the gold for you; you only need a savings account. Many banks in Malaysia offer this service, with fees around 1%, but be aware of currency exchange costs. In the U.S., such services are less common, but HSBC in Hong Kong provides them. Looking for a lower investment threshold? Gold ETFs are worth considering. Malaysia’s 0828EA, and the U.S. ETFs GLD and IAU are good options. These funds are highly liquid and easy to buy and sell, but they can only go long, not short, and management fees should be included (0.25%–1% per year). In Malaysia, you can buy local ETFs through brokers; if you have an overseas account, you can also buy U.S. gold ETFs. The Hong Kong market offers options like Hang Seng Gold ETF. If you have some trading experience and want more flexibility, gold futures and CFDs are more attractive. Futures allow two-way trading with high leverage, suitable for short-term operations, but they have expiration dates, require rollover, and trading costs are not low. CFDs are more flexible, with no expiration date limits, low investment thresholds (starting from 0.01 lots), and many leverage options. Malaysia doesn’t have many CFD exchanges locally, but you can trade through overseas regulated brokers. The U.S. has stricter CFD regulations, while Hong Kong’s market is more accepting, with platforms like IG Markets, Plus500, Saxo Capital Markets, etc. Regarding where to buy gold at the best price, my advice is to choose based on your risk tolerance and trading style. Conservative investors should opt for physical gold or ETFs, while aggressive investors can try futures or CFDs. For beginners, practice with demo accounts first, get familiar with market feel before investing real money. Most importantly, manage your risks well, especially when using leverage trading, and be cautious.
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AirdropHunter9000

AirdropHunter9000

05-20 14:53
Recently, I've seen many people discussing gold investment. I’ve also played with gold savings accounts myself. Since last year, gold prices have risen from just over 3,000 to 4,240, and the unrealized gains are pretty good. However, the most common question from beginners is which gold savings account is good, and whether they should buy it at all. To be honest, a gold savings account is essentially a digital gold ledger kept by the bank. You deposit TWD, and the bank converts it into a certain number of grams of gold recorded in the account. There’s no physical gold, no interest earned, just profit from price differences. In the past two years, global central banks have been buying gold aggressively, over 1,000 tons, so demand has surged. But don’t be misled—this is suitable for long-term holding, not for frequent short-term trading. Regarding which bank’s gold savings account is best, I’ve checked the major banks in Taiwan. Honestly, there’s not much difference. Taiwan Bank, First Bank, China Trust, E.SUN Bank, and Hua Nan Bank all offer it. Opening an account costs about 100 NT dollars at the counter, around 50 NT online, and most transactions are fee-free. But for regular fixed investments, there’s a fee—about 100 NT per month—and transfers also cost money. The spread is similar across banks: about 0.7% in TWD terms, and slightly cheaper in USD at around 0.5%. I personally opened mine at Taiwan Bank because their online interface is smooth, the USD spread is small, and they have many branches for convenience. But honestly, choosing a gold savings account mainly depends on convenience—close to home, low opening fee, good app—differences aren’t that big. Sometimes banks run promotions waiving the opening fee, so it’s worth waiting for those. The account opening process is simple: bring your ID card, health insurance card, and seal to the bank counter, fill out an application, and link a debit account. Once opened, buying and selling are as easy as online transfers. You can buy with a minimum of 200 NT dollars, set limit orders for automatic execution, or open a regular fixed amount savings plan. Selling is just as simple—just click online to transfer back to your savings account, with no fees. But there are some pain points to be aware of. First, you can only buy low and sell high; short selling isn’t possible. Second, the buy-sell spread is about 1.5%, which is more expensive than ETFs. Third, you can only sell during bank hours, which can be awkward if you need to exit quickly. Fourth, capital gains tax applies when selling, so remember to report it in May each year. My own approach is to use Taiwan Bank’s USD savings account, referencing the 60-day moving average (MA60). When the price drops 3-5%, I add more. This helps average down the cost and avoid buying at the high. During the 2025 rally, I used this method to realize about 15% unrealized profit. But now, gold prices are quite high, so I don’t recommend going all-in at once; a regular fixed investment plan is more stable. If you’re looking for short-term swings or cash flow, a gold savings account might not be suitable. Instead, consider gold ETFs like Taiwan’s 00635U or US stocks’ GLD. They have no buy-sell spread, good liquidity, and management fees of about 0.4-1% annually. Or you can trade physical gold directly via XAUUSD, which operates 24/7, with tight spreads, instant liquidity, but watch out for exchange rate risk and leverage risk. In summary, there’s no absolute answer to which gold savings account is best; it mainly depends on your usage habits. For beginners, starting with Taiwan Bank or First Bank is recommended—they’re reputable big banks. If you’re like me and don’t want to monitor the market constantly, a gold savings account is a good, safe, and convenient low-risk option. Just don’t expect to get rich quick—this is a steady, long-term investment, and combining it with regular fixed investments yields the best results.
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