Mapping the Market: Silver's losing streak could surrender more ground to gold

Silver has lost roughly half its value since peaking at an all-time high in January amid a broad shakeout in precious metals prices. But it has also ​dropped by more than a third against gold, and charts suggest it is ‌knocking on the door of levels that could spark further losses against the yellow metal.

The troubles for both gold and silver started on January 30, when speculation that the Federal Reserve might be less inclined to ​cut interest rates swept through the market. Rising fears of inflation since the start ​of the Iran war exacerbated this sentiment as markets increasingly prepared for the ⁠possibility of rate hikes in the U.S. Get a look at the day ahead in U.S. and global markets with the Morning Bid U.S. newsletter.

Silver was hit much harder than gold, in part ​due to its status as an industrial metal, which increases its sensitivity to shifts in appetite ​among investors to take risks. Silver had also had a much bigger rally than gold, so it had more to give back in the subsequent retreat. Gold's rise against silver appears to be gaining momentum after recently breaking ​above the 200-day moving average at $66.76, according to LSEG data. Technical analysts use the 200-day ​moving average to smooth out price changes to more clearly discern trends. The next big target in gold's rise ‌versus ⁠silver is $70, which will be an important psychological level given that markets often focus on big round numbers. A sustainable advance above there would increase expectations that it would challenge the February 6 high of $72.74 and then $75.25, the halfway point of gold's fall versus silver since April ​2025.

However, if silver were ​to mount a comeback, ⁠it would first have to pull gold back below the 200-day moving average before moving on to the June 22 low of $62.68. A drop ​below $60.56, which is the halfway point of the price range from ​May and ⁠June, would increase momentum in silver's favor.

Gold-to-silver ratio breaks above the 200-day moving average, signaling further silver weakness Next upside target for the ratio ⁠is 70, ​with 72.74 as a key resistance level beyond that (Daily ​markets commentary from Reuters analysts on the signals financial charts are sending - and what they might me

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