Silver? Still trying to find its footing somewhere between $78 and $90. The rebound has been choppy, inconsistent, and driven more by short-covering than genuine conviction. Standard Chartered's commodities team pointed out that both metals were trading in aggressively overbought territory before the crash, but silver's correction has been far more damaging because the speculative excess was far more extreme.
What gold has that silver lacks right now is a diversified buyer base with long time horizons. Central banks don't sell when prices dip 5%. ETF inflows into physical gold trusts hit record levels in 2025, with Sprott's physical gold trust alone pulling in $1.5 billion. Silver ETFs saw action too, but their flows are more volatile and sentiment-driven.
The industrial demand story for silver is genuine photovoltaic panels, electronics, AI infrastructure but analysts at Morningstar noted that solar manufacturers have actually been reducing their silver usage, substituting cheaper alternatives where possible. That undercuts the supply deficit narrative that bulls lean on so heavily.
The takeaway isn't that silver has no future. It's that when fear hits the market, gold proves why it's been the world's preferred store of value for thousands of years. Silver just reminded everyone it's still half industrial metal, half speculation vehicle.
#XAU #XAU #GoldenOpportunity #MarketRebound 