Outrageous Predictions
A Fortune 500 company names an AI model as CEO
Charu Chanana
Chief Investment Strategist
Head of Commodity Strategy
Silver has suddenly burst higher, reigniting excitement among traders who successfully rode last year’s rally before the bubble burst in late January, triggering an almost 50% correction through March. Since then, the metal has staged a strong recovery, with momentum accelerating over the past week as the white metal rallied 15%, lifting its year-to-date return to around 20%, while still trading more than 150% above year-ago levels. XAGUSD surged to a two-month high near USD 88 earlier today, extending Monday’s 7% rally before surrendering part of the gain as higher oil prices lifted both bond yields and the dollar. Even so, the latest move has, for now at least, changed the short-term technical outlook, with the break above the USD 82–83 resistance area triggering renewed buying from hedge funds and other momentum-focused investors that had remained largely sidelined in recent weeks.
The move also reflects silver’s high-beta credentials relative to gold, with the white metal benefiting from its dual appeal as both an investment and industrial metal. Gold, meanwhile, continues to consolidate, with its latest inability to fully join the silver rally partly linked to concerns that higher energy prices may delay rate cuts, but also to Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s recent call for Indians to pause gold purchases for at least a year in an attempt to ease pressure on the country’s foreign-exchange reserves and weakening rupee.
That development has helped drive the gold-silver ratio sharply lower to around 55, the lowest since early March, highlighting silver’s current outperformance. The ratio has once again fallen well below the near-70 average seen for almost three decades. Gold, meanwhile, remains rangebound, with support established ahead of USD 4,500, while resistance is found at the 50-day moving average near USD 4,757, followed by USD 4,850.
Beyond the technical breakout, silver is also drawing support from a rapidly strengthening industrial metals complex. Copper futures in both New York and London recorded fresh record closing highs on Monday, driven by strong Chinese demand, sharply declining visible inventories, and growing concerns about future supply availability.
As a key transition metal used across electrification, renewable energy, electronics, AI infrastructure, and automotive production, silver continues to benefit from many of the same structural themes currently supporting copper. In recent weeks, traders have increasingly looked past the potential economic slowdown risks tied to the Middle East conflict and instead focused on the growing challenge of securing sufficient supply of strategically important metals.
The ongoing disruption to trade flows through the Strait of Hormuz has added another layer of uncertainty to an already tightening supply outlook. While silver itself is not directly dependent on Gulf exports, the conflict has contributed to rising energy, freight, and refining costs across multiple commodity supply chains, thereby reinforcing broader inflation and resource scarcity concerns.
Fundamentally, silver also remains supported by another expected annual supply deficit at a time when both physical and investment demand remain firm, especially in China, where local demand for precious and industrial metals has stayed elevated despite broader economic concerns. Importantly, silver mine supply tends to respond slowly to higher prices because much global production comes as a by-product of lead, zinc, copper, and gold mining.
The ongoing disruption to trade flows through the Strait of Hormuz has added another layer of uncertainty to an already tightening supply outlook. While silver itself is not directly dependent on Gulf exports, the conflict has contributed to rising energy, freight, and refining costs across multiple commodity supply chains, thereby reinforcing broader inflation and resource scarcity concerns.
Fundamentally, silver also remains supported by another expected annual supply deficit at a time when both physical and investment demand remain firm, especially in China, where local demand for precious and industrial metals has stayed elevated despite broader economic concerns. Importantly, silver mine supply tends to respond slowly to higher prices because much global production comes as a by-product of lead, zinc, copper, and gold mining.
The latest rally nevertheless carries short-term risks. After such a violent rebound, the market now needs confirmation that the breakout can stick, not least given the potentially speculative nature of the latest run-up. A sustained hold above the former breakout area around USD 82–83 would likely encourage additional systematic and momentum-driven buying. However, a failure back below that zone could trigger renewed long liquidation from recently established bullish positions.
For now, silver appears to have regained a narrative that had been missing earlier this year: a market supported not only by precious metals demand and geopolitical uncertainty, but increasingly by structural industrial demand at a time when global supply growth remains constrained.
Beyond developments in gold, traders will continue to watch the Middle East conflict closely given its impact on the dollar, bond yields, and inflation expectations, while today’s US CPI report for April may provide additional near-term direction. Consensus expects headline inflation to moderate to 3.3% year-on-year, while core inflation is seen edging higher to 2.7%.
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