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Gold prices in Vietnam on 3/5/2026 show a firm, high-price tone in the domestic market, while international gold remains choppy around elevated levels.
Domestic gold (VND/tael): Retail buy/sell quotes were reported across multiple purity and product lines. For Vàng 416 (10K), the market quoted buy 59,530,000 and sell 68,430,000 VND/tael. For Vàng 585 (14K), buy 87,330,000 and sell 96,230,000 VND/tael. For Vàng 610 (14.6K), buy 91,450,000 and sell 100,350,000 VND/tael.
Higher purities were also quoted at elevated levels: Vàng 680 (16.3K) buy 102,960,000, sell 111,860,000; Vàng 750 (18K) buy 114,480,000, sell 123,380,000 VND/tael. Jewelry lines were quoted higher, including Vàng nữ trang 99%: buy 156,660,000 and sell 162,860,000 VND/tael, and Vàng nữ trang 99,99%: buy 160,500,000 and sell 164,500,000 VND/tael.
PNJ-related quotes were also stable at the high end: Nhẫn trơn PNJ 999.9: buy 163,000,000 and sell 166,000,000 VND/tael, and Vàng miếng SJC: buy 163,000,000 and sell 166,000,000 VND/tael.
Recent comparison (sell price): The data provided shows the previous day and 7-day sell levels for each domestic item. Examples include Vàng 416 (10K) sell at 68,430,000 (previous day) and 69,713,000 (7 days ago). Vàng 585 (14K) sell at 96,230,000 (previous day) and 97,404,000 (7 days ago). Vàng 750 (18K) sell at 123,380,000 (previous day) and 125,263,000 (7 days ago). For the SJC bar and PNJ ring, sell prices were 166,000,000 (previous day) and 168,800,000 (7 days ago). No 30-day comparison values were provided (marked as “-”).
International gold: Global gold was quoted at 4,644.5 USD/oz. The previous day level was 4,645.7 USD/oz, and 7 days ago it was 4,694.3 USD/oz. A 30-day comparison was not provided (marked as “-”).
News context (past 24 hours): Reports highlighted that gold prices were “ranging” amid heightened tensions and risks of downside, while domestic and international spreads remained elevated. Multiple outlets also noted gold holding near high levels over the weekend, with some coverage pointing to unfavorable conditions before pressure from an “oil shock” scenario and continued high domestic–global differentials.
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