The silver has been no better with a dip of about 8 per cent in its prices. The gold prices have dipped by about 5 per cent this year.
Extreme volatile in the rupee value and the uncertainty around the long-pending rate hike in the US added to the roller-coaster ride for gold throughout 2015, while the headwinds from a slowdown in China added to the worries.
Measures to curb gold imports for most part of the year and the government's ambitious gold monetisation scheme to encourage households and institutions including temples also had their own impacts.
After beginning the year at around Rs 26,700 per ten gram, the gold prices have fallen to Rs 25,500-level so far in 2015 with just four more days of trading to go.
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The silver prices have also fallen from about Rs 37,200 per kg to close to Rs 34,300 level this year.
Heavy outflows from the gold exchange-traded funds (ETFs) too played a role in driving down both the prices and the investors' expectations.
India's gold demand, which normally see its strongest
spike in the fourth quarter due to the busy wedding and festival season, could not see much revival on higher domestic inventories.
The country's gold import tumbled by 36.48 per cent to USD 3.53 billion in November this year, while silver took a big slump, dropping by whopping 55 per cent to USD 285.01 million in the same period, according to the Commerce Ministry data.
A collapse in global commodity markets, coupled with a slowdown in the worldwide consumption, added to the worries as the year progressed.
By July, the gold prices crashed below the Rs 25,000- barrier to hit a low of Rs 24,590 - its lowest level since 2011 -- amid a global commodity market meltdown.
The gold prices are now more than 25 per cent away from the lifetime high of Rs 33,790 conquered in August 28, 2013.
This is the third straight year of downward path for gold, which remained the most the favoured asset class for more than a decade by outperforming all other investment instruments in India between 2003 and 2012.
It peaked above the USD 1,300-mark an ounce at the beginning of the year, but witnessed a catastrophic sell-off soon after and crashed below the crucial USD 1,100 level to hit a five-year low of USD 1,046 toward the year-end after Federal Reserve's historic monetary tightening.
Industrial metal silver also crumbled to hit a low of USD 13.884 an ounce mark after the China's commodity driven growth took a big reversal. It had climbed a high of USD 18.36 in early January.
The Presidential election in the US and the Europe referendum in the UK in 2016, China's continuing economic wobbles and the big cyclical downturn in commodities may pose a fresh set of challenges for the yellow metal next year.