Floating Button
Home News Gold

Gold and silver rise to records on rate-cut bets, global risks

Mark Burton & Robin Paxton / Bloomberg
Mark Burton & Robin Paxton / Bloomberg • 4 min read
Gold and silver rise to records on rate-cut bets, global risks
Spot gold climbed as much as 1.2% to just below US$4,500 an ounce, extending gains after its biggest one-day jump in more than a month, while silver was close to US$70.
Font Resizer
Share to Whatsapp
Share to Facebook
Share to LinkedIn
Scroll to top
Follow us on Facebook and join our Telegram channel for the latest updates.

(Dec 23): Gold and silver rose to all-time highs on escalating geopolitical tensions and prospects for more US rate cuts.

Spot gold climbed as much as 1.2% to just below US$4,500 ($5,782) an ounce, extending gains after its biggest one-day jump in more than a month. Silver was close to US$70. Traders are betting the Federal Reserve will follow three straight interest-rate cuts by lowering the cost of borrowing again next year, which would be a tailwind for non-yielding precious metals.

Gold’s haven appeal has also been amplified in the last week by rising geopolitical tensions, particularly in Venezuela, where the US has blockaded oil tankers as it ratchets up pressure on the government of President Nicolás Maduro.

“Geopolitical frictions have re-entered the narrative,” said Ahmad Assiri, a strategist at Pepperstone Group, citing the oil-tanker seizures. “These developments, while not triggering outright risk-off moves, undoubtedly add to the background demand for gold as a must-have hedge.”

Gold has surged 70% this year and is on track for its best annual performance since 1979. The blistering rally has been underpinned by elevated central-bank purchases and inflows into exchange-traded funds, with total holdings in gold-backed ETFs rising every month this year except May, according to World Gold Council data.

US President Donald Trump’s aggressive moves to reshape global trade — as well as his threats to the Fed’s independence — added fuel to the bull run earlier this year. Investors have also been spurred in part by the so-called debasement trade — a retreat from sovereign bonds and the currencies they are denominated in over fears their value will erode over time due to ballooning debt levels.

See also: Gold, silver near record highs as US data in support of rate-cut bets

Heavy ETF buying has been a major driver of the surge. Holdings in State Street Corp’s SPDR Gold Trust, the biggest precious-metals ETF, have risen by more than a fifth this year.

“Gold ETF inflows over the past few months have been driven largely by retail rather than institutional investors,” said Apoorva Javadekar, chief economist at Muthoot Fincorp Ltd. Price volatility will remain elevated as “retail flows are less sticky,” he said.

Bullion has bounced back quickly after a retreat from its previous peak of US$4,381 in October, when the rally was seen as overheated, and is now positioned to carry these gains into next year. Goldman Sachs Group Inc is among several banks to predict prices will keep rising in 2026, issuing a base-case scenario of US$4,900 an ounce with risks to the upside.

See also: Gold climbs near record on haven flows and US rate cut bets

Silver rose as much as 1.4% to US$69.99 an ounce. The white metal’s rally of around 140% this year has been even more spectacular than gold’s, with its most recent advance buoyed by speculative inflows and lingering supply dislocations across major trading hubs following a historic short squeeze in October.

London’s vaults have seen significant inflows since then, but much of the world’s available silver remains in New York as traders await the outcome of a US Commerce Department probe on whether critical minerals imports threaten national security, which could lead to tariffs or trade restrictions on the metal. Meanwhile in China, silver kept in warehouses linked to the Shanghai Futures Exchange hit the lowest level since 2015 last month.

Gold’s relative strength index indicates the metal has moved into overbought territory, with a readings above 80 as of Tuesday. Silver — currently near 80 — has been at elevated levels for around two weeks. Readings above 70 typically signal overbought conditions.

This has not put off investors. “Instead of sellers stepping in aggressively, both gold and silver continue to attract buying into strength,” said Pepperstone’s Assiri. “This behaviour suggests that US$4,500 and US$70 are being treated less as hard ceilings and more as reference points within ongoing trends, leaving both metals firmly supported for now and over the holidays.”

Spot gold rose 1% to US$4,488.89 an ounce as of 11:48pm in London. Silver was up 0.9% to US$69.67.

Uploaded by Magessan Varatharaja

×
The Edge Singapore
Download The Edge Singapore App
Google playApple store play
Keep updated
Follow our social media
© 2025 The Edge Publishing Pte Ltd. All rights reserved.