Gold and Silver Rebound from Last Week’s Dramatic Declines
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Gold closed higher on Monday, gaining $27.20, or 0.60%, to settle at $4,570 per troy ounce — snapping a four-session losing streak that had erased $180 from the metal’s value last week. The session offered a measure of relief for bullion bulls, though analysts cautioned that the drivers lifting prices remain fragile. Chief among them were renewed hopes for a diplomatic resolution between the United States and Iran, as well as a softer US dollar, which typically makes dollar-denominated commodities more attractive to international buyers.
Gains were tempered, however, by a concurrent rise in oil prices and renewed threats from President Donald Trump. In a post on Truth Social, the president warned Iran that the “clock is ticking” and that there “won’t be anything left” if the country fails to act, adding that “time is of the essence.” The remarks underscored the delicate equilibrium currently holding the market in check: geopolitical risk is supportive of safe-haven demand, yet outright escalation threatens the kind of energy-market disruption that could stoke inflation and force a more aggressive monetary policy response.
That concern is already filtering through rate markets. According to the CME Group’s FedWatch Tool, traders are now pricing in a greater than 50% probability that the Federal Reserve will raise borrowing costs before year-end — a meaningful shift driven, in part, by inflation pressures emanating from the energy sector amid the ongoing US-Iran standoff. Higher interest rates generally weigh on non-yielding assets such as gold by increasing the opportunity cost of holding them, creating a structural headwind even as geopolitical uncertainty provides a floor.
Silver Surges After Historic Two-Day Rout
Silver mirrored gold’s recovery, climbing $1.85, or 2.39%, to close at $78.12 per ounce. The rebound followed a harrowing end to the prior week in which the metal shed $12.87, or 14.43%, across just two trading sessions — a decline that left the market technically oversold and ripe for short-covering. While Monday’s gains are welcome, they recover only a fraction of last week’s losses, and the white metal’s dual role as both a monetary and industrial commodity leaves it particularly exposed to shifting growth expectations.
Outlook: The Path to a Sustained Rally
Despite Monday’s constructive price action, both metals remain in precarious territory. The fundamental and geopolitical backdrop is likely to keep sentiment volatile in the near term, with headlines from the Gulf region capable of moving markets sharply in either direction. For gold and silver to mount a durable, sustained advance rather than merely bounce within a downtrend, traders and analysts broadly agree that two conditions must be met: a meaningful de-escalation or outright end to the US-Iran conflict, and a reopening of the Strait of Hormuz to normal energy transit.
The Strait remains one of the world’s most critical energy chokepoints, through which a significant share of global oil and liquefied natural gas exports flows daily. Its closure or restriction has cascading effects across commodity markets, supply chains, and ultimately consumer prices worldwide. Until the geopolitical fog lifts and energy flows normalize, precious metals are likely to remain hostage to headlines — supported by uncertainty yet constrained by the inflationary and monetary-policy consequences of the very crisis underpinning demand.
Wishing you as always good trading,

Gary S. Wagner - Executive Producer