Friday, December 26, 2025

The Bull vs. Bear Case for Silver and Gold

Gold (GCG26) prices overnight climbed to a fresh record high of $4,530.80 an ounce, basis February Comex futures. March Comex silver (SIH26) futures also hit a record high of $70.155 an ounce overnight. Gold marked its 50th record-breaking session this year, as both metals are being driven higher by safe-haven demand amid escalating U.S.-Venezuela tensions, as well as expectations of more U.S. interest rate cuts later next year. So far this year, gold has soared 70%, on track for its strongest annual gain since 1979. Silver is up by over 130% this year.

www.barchart.com
www.barchart.com
www.barchart.com
www.barchart.com

Let’s break down, in bullet points, the bullish and bearish elements that will be impacting gold and silver prices in the new year.

  • Technical factors remain firmly bullish overall, as near-term and longer-term price uptrends remain in place on the daily, weekly, and monthly charts.

  • U.S. Federal Reserve monetary policy is likely to lean overall dovish in 2026, especially as President Donald Trump will hand-pick his Fed chair, who will come on board in late spring. Easier Fed monetary policy would likely put pressure on other major global central banks to also keep their monetary policies easier. That would mean better global demand for gold and silver, and possibly a weaker U.S. dollar.

www.barchart.com
www.barchart.com
  • Global central banks are still stocking up on gold, with China leading the way. More of the same is likely in 2026.

  • Major countries continue hoarding rare earths. The artificial intelligence, electric vehicles, and increasing solar power around the globe mean more demand for minerals and metals, like silver. Major countries are stocking up on “rare earths” for their own needs now, and needs in the future.

  • Geopolitics. The current U.S.-Venezuelan tensions are the latest upset to the general marketplace that is driving better safe-haven demand for gold and silver. That situation will de-escalate at some point but will very likely be followed shortly thereafter by some new political stress somewhere in the world. And then something after that. Such is the way the world works, as history shows.

  • The gold and silver markets are in very mature runs — likely in the eighth or ninth inning, in baseball terms. Raw commodity markets, including metals, are highly cyclical. History proves they go through periods of boom and bust, only to start the cycle over again. There is no doubt gold and silver, as well as platinum and palladium, are in boom cycles at present. So bust will follow. We just don’t know precisely when.

  • The Federal Reserve may not be able to lean as easy on U.S. monetary policy as many doves hope. A stronger U.S. GDP reading on Tuesday and persistently elevated U.S. inflation levels may keep the Fed’s hands tied on further reducing U.S. interest rates —no matter what President Donald Trump may want.

  • A booming U.S. stock market. While the major U.S. stock indexes have turned choppy and sideways recently, they are still not that far below their recent record highs. A bullish U.S. stock market is bearish for metals, from a competing asset class perspective.

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