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Gold $4,632.93 $46.22 1.01% Silver $91.95 $4.78 5.48% Platinum $2,384.20 $51.68 2.22% Palladium $1,858.75 $25.3 1.38%
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Blog posts tagged with 'palladium'

Zaner Precious Metals Commentary
Monday, January 12, 2026

Gold starts the week with new record highs, while silver reclaims the 85-handle

Outside Market Developments: Fed Chairman Powell revealed on Sunday that the DoJ had served the Fed with grand jury subpoenas on Friday related to his June 2025 congressional testimony about the central bank's headquarters renovation project. Powell described the action as a pretext for political pressure to force lower interest rates, marking a major escalation in tensions with the Trump administration.

A Bloomberg article suggested FHFA Director Bill Pulte had pushed for scrutiny of Powell's testimony. However, Pulte has denied knowledge of the subpoenas, calling the DoJ "out of my purview."

President Trump has been extremely critical of Powell, so it's not surprising that many see the legal action as an avenue to install a more dovish Fed chair before Powell's term expires in May. The market is expressing concern about the potential loss of Fed independence, but at the same time, acknowledging that the leadership change – whether in May or sooner – will tilt the Fed more dovish.

This is stoking risk appetite to start the week, although Fed funds futures currently suggest the central bank is likely on pause for the first half of 2026. The trade still sees scope for 50 bps in total easing this year, although the first 25 bps cut isn't fully priced in until September. FedSpeak is on tap today from Bostic, Barkin, and Williams 

The Trump administration has vowed to run the economy hot and sees the Fed's measured pace of rate cuts as a hurdle to be overcome. Both Pulte and Trump likely see more aggressive easing as a means to lower mortgage rates, making housing more affordable, and encourage refinancings to free up disposable income.

More disposable income would stoke consumption, which is the primary driver of the U.S. economy. However, lower mortgage rates also tend to drive up home prices. And hotter consumption could revive inflation more broadly. December CPI and PPI data are out later this week, with expectations leaning steady to slightly hotter.

If the DoJ charges are indeed viewed as a "tactic" to expedite Powell's replacement, it could give some GOP Senators pause, posing a challenge for the confirmation of Trump's preferred nominee. That could lead to a centrist Fed chair.

Separately, Trump has called for a one-year cap on credit card interest rates at 10%, amid record-high consumer debt levels. U.S. household debt reached a staggering $18.59 trillion in Q3 2025, with credit card and other revolving debt accounting for $1.21 trillion.

Not surprisingly, the banking industry objects as a 10% cap means some risk is going to be underpriced. This could lead to reduced credit availability, card cancellations for riskier borrowers, and drive consumers to costlier alternatives such as payday loans.

Iran remains gripped by the largest anti-government uprising since 2022. The unrest has spread to dozens of cities and challenges the Islamic Republic's clerical rule. The regime has imposed a near-total internet blackout, intensifying its crackdown with live ammunition and mass arrests.

President Trump has expressed support for the protestors and threatened intervention. Iran says that would prompt retaliation against U.S. and/or Israeli interests.

Venezuela remains in turmoil following the U.S. military operation on January 3 that captured and removed President Nicolás Maduro. While President Trump has vowed a swift restoration of democracy, economic sanctions relief upon verifiable free elections, and massive reconstruction aid, the country faces intensified repression by security forces, widespread uncertainty over governance, and international condemnation of the intervention as a violation of Venezuelan sovereignty.

In Greenland, tensions have escalated dramatically as President Trump repeatedly threatened to acquire the Danish autonomous territory "the easy way or the hard way." Greenlandic and Danish leaders have firmly rejected any sale or annexation, with European allies – including France, Germany, and the UK – issuing strong rebukes.

Here in America, political tensions remain elevated as anti-ICE protests intensified over the weekend. Many media outlets frame them as mounting outrage against perceived overreach in immigration policy, tying into broader criticisms of the administration's tactics, with some explicitly noting risks of wider unrest amid heightened tensions.


GOLD

OVERNIGHT CHANGE THROUGH 6:00 AM CT: +$76.42 (+1.69%)
5-Day Change: +$172.37 (+3.87%)
YTD Range: $4,310.83 - $4,629.64
52-Week Range: $2,657.28 - $4,629.64
Weighted Alpha: +72.68

Gold begins the week with a strong bid, reaching fresh record highs above $4,600. The yellow metal is being spurred by heightened haven interest associated with high geopolitical and domestic political tensions, worries over Fed independence, expectations for further Fed rate cuts later this year, a generally soft dollar, and mounting fiscal risks.

 

The $4,624.44 Fibonacci objective has been satisfied, boosting confidence in the extended bullish scenario that suggests potential to $5,000 in Q1'26. Intervening targets are noted at $4,686.61 and $4,719.43.

ETF inflows were a tepid 9.7 tonnes last week, but all regions were net buyers. It was the tenth consecutive week of inflows. I anticipate that today's move to record highs after two weeks of corrective/consolidative action is going to reinvigorate ETF interest.


The previous record highs at $4,549.77/17 now mark initial support. Today's Asian low at $4,509.87 is the more important short-term level to watch. Buying on dips ahead of the latter seems likely with additional support at $4,500.34/$4,497.29. The rising 20-day moving average is well protected at $4,418.59. 


SILVER

OVERNIGHT CHANGE THROUGH 6:00 AM CT: +$3.913 (+4.90%)
5-Day Change: +$9.272 (+12.10%)
YTD Range: $71.429 - $74.552
52-Week Range: $28.565 - $86.637
Weighted Alpha: +229.49

Silver surged back above $85 in overseas trading on Monday, bringing the $86.637 record high from late December back within striking distance. The white metal begins the week with a gain of more than 6%, and a stunning weighted alpha reading well above 200, driven by spillover haven interest, rising geoplitical tensions, and a persistent supply/demand imbalance.



New record highs above $86.637 would clear the way for a push to $88.297 (200% retrace of the decline from $50 to $11.703), $90, and $91.009. An eventual move above the latter would lead to increasingly serious talk about $100 silver.

Intraday support at $83.597 protects today's Asian low at $79.993. The magnitude of the retracement last week went a long way toward confirming that a corrective low was in place at $70.562. I'm calling the $70 zone key support. While it seems likely that volatility is destined to remain high, buying strategies remain favored.


Peter A. Grant
Vice President, Senior Metals Strategist
Zaner Metals LLC
312-549-9986 Direct/Text
[email protected]
www.zanermetals.com

Non-Reliance and Risk Disclosure: The opinions expressed here are for general information purposes only and should not be construed as trade recommendations, nor a solicitation of an offer to buy or sell any precious metals product. The material presented is based on information that we consider reliable, but we do not represent that it is accurate, complete, and/or up-to-date, and it should not be relied on as such. Opinions expressed are current as of the time of posting and only represent the views of the author and not those of Zaner Metals LLC unless otherwise expressly noted.

Zaner Precious Metals Commentary
Monday, January 5, 2026

Gold and silver start the week on the bid amid heightened haven interest, soft dollar 

OUTSIDE MARKET DEVELOPMENTS: Over the weekend, U.S. forces conducted a daring pre-dawn raid on Venezuela's Fort Tiuna, capturing Nicolas Maduro and his wife. The couple was quickly extracted by helicopter to the USS Iwo Jima in the Caribbean before being flown to New York, where Maduro now faces federal charges, including narcoterrorism.

The UN Security Council held an emergency meeting this morning, at the request of Colombia and Venezuela, with strong backing from Russia and China, who condemned the action as a violation of international law and sovereignty. Russia, China, and some of their allies pushed for condemnation of the U.S. "aggression" and called for Maduro's release. The U.S. defended the raid as justified self-defense against narcoterrorism under Article 51 of the UN Charter. No resolutions were passed, with the U.S poised to exercise its veto power.

Global financial markets reacted with relative calm to events in Venezuela. Oil prices were volatile but remained broadly steady to slightly higher. OPEC met briefly on Sunday and is reportedly maintaining its existing output policy amid an anticipated global oil surplus, rather than making any adjustments for Venezuelan developments.

Venezuela has the largest proven oil reserves in the world, at approximately 303 bln barrels. However, output is dominated by lower-quality, heavier, sour crudes that are more difficult to refine into valuable products like gasoline. That being said, refineries on the U.S. Gulf Coast are capable of processing this grade of oil. 

Although there is a fair amount of uncertainty about what happens next, risk appetite has rebounded from recent subdued levels. U.S. stock indices are higher, buoyed by ongoing AI optimism and gains in energy companies on expectations of a Venezuelan oil sector revival. President Trump vowed U.S. oil companies will invest "billions and billions" into the country.

The official VES-USD rate was relatively stable above 300. Information on the more indicative black market rate was sparse, but thought to be around 560. Once the dust settles, the bolívar may garner some strength amid hopes of economic stabilization. Venezuelan government bonds surged as markets priced in hopes of eventual debt restructuring under a U.S.-friendly government, reflecting optimism about unlocking investment despite ongoing political and legal controversies.

Markets will be focused on U.S. labor market data this week. Friday's December nonfarm payrolls report on will be the highlight. Median expectations are +50k. Incoming jobs data may help clarify the policy outlook for the first half of the year.

Manufacturing ISM ebbed to 47.9 in December, below expectations of 48.3, versus 48.2 in November. It was the third straight monthly decline. On the bright side, employment and new orders metrics improved.


GOLD

OVERNIGHT CHANGE THROUGH 6:00 AM CT: +$87.01 (+2.01%)
5-Day Change: +$117.65 (+2.72%)
YTD Range: $4310.83 - $4,455.50
52-Week Range: $2,621.42 - $4,549.77
Weighted Alpha: +65.60

Gold starts the week on the bid, spurred by safe-haven interest in light of weekend events in Venezuela, which arguably raise already high tensions with China and Russia. While the dollar index initially rallied to four-week highs, those gains could not be sustained, and now DXY is lower on the day.



With more than 61.8% of recent corrective losses retraced, considerable confidence has been returned to the underlying uptrend. The next tier of Fibonacci resistance is at $4,491.02 (78.6%). A breach of this level would clear the way for a retest of the $4,549.77 record high.

Additional upside targets are noted at $4,624.44, $4,686.61, and $4,719.43. Further out, the $5,000 objective remains valid, with attainment in Q1 deemed likely.

The rebound off the 20-day moving average provides additional encouragement to the bull camp. While further choppy trading may prevail in the short term, the current range low at $4,275.24 clearly defines risk. Intervening support levels are found at $4,420, $4400.00/$4,396.80, $4,333.91, and $4,310.83.

Keep an eye out this week for signs of additional weakness in the U.S. labor market, as that would increase the likelihood of a Fed rate cut before June. That in turn would keep pressure on the dollar and underpin gold.

Gold is also likely to continue taking its cues from short-term action in silver.


SILVER

OVERNIGHT CHANGE THROUGH 6:00 AM CT: +$1.969 (+2.70%)
5-Day Change: +$4.991 (+6.92%)
YTD Range: $71.429 - $77.153
52-Week Range: $28.565 - $86.637
Weighted Alpha: +188.31

Silver is up more than 5% intraday, garnering revived haven interest, with some help provided by strength in gold and the failure of the greenback to sustain intraday gains. More than 38.2% of the recent retreat has been retraced, boosting confidence that the dominant trend is still very much bullish.



 A breach of the midpoint of the recent range at $78.600 would offer further encouragement to the bull camp. The 30-Dec high at $78.046 provides an intervening barrier.

A short-term rebound above $80 would shift focus to retracement levels at $80.496 (61.8%) and $83.197 (78.6%). Penetrations of these levels would clear the way for a challenge of last week's record high at $86.637. 

Venezuela is not a significant silver producer due to underinvestment and poor infrastructure. Known reserves would be exploitable with sufficient investment, but that would take years, and at this point, oil seems to be the Trump administration's focus. I don't foresee any meaningful dent in silver's persistent supply deficit.

On the downside, minor intraday support at $75 protects the early U.S. low at $74.613. Below the latter, the Asian low at $72.839 looks to be well protected. The $70.562 level, down to $70.000, looks increasingly like the key short-term level that has to hold. 


Peter A. Grant
Vice President, Senior Metals Strategist
Zaner Metals LLC
312-549-9986 Direct/Text
[email protected]
www.zanermetals.com

Non-Reliance and Risk Disclosure: The opinions expressed here are for general information purposes only and should not be construed as trade recommendations, nor a solicitation of an offer to buy or sell any precious metals product. The material presented is based on information that we consider reliable, but we do not represent that it is accurate, complete, and/or up-to-date, and it should not be relied on as such. Opinions expressed are current as of the time of posting and only represent the views of the author and not those of Zaner Metals LLC unless otherwise expressly noted.

Morning Metals Call
Monday, January 5, 2026

Good morning. The precious metals are higher in early U.S. trading.

Quote Board

U.S. calendar features Manufacturing ISM, Vehicle Sales.

Zaner Precious Metals Commentary
Friday, January 2, 2026

Gold straddles the 20-day moving average on the first trading day of 2026

Outside Market Developments: Wall Street opened higher on the first trading day of 2026, although risk appetite remains subdued amid thin holiday trading. Shares are being underpinned by ongoing AI enthusiasm, strength in European indexes, and expectations for further Fed easing this year.

Ongoing trade tensions, concerns about overvaluation, and geopolitical risks linger. Markets could see choppiness as the "Santa Claus rally" window closes; typically, the second trading day of the year, which would be Monday.

Mass protests have erupted across Iran, spurred by the dramatic collapse of the rial and soaring inflation. President Trump has threatened to intervene if Iranian security forces use lethal force against demonstrators.

Focus next week will be on U.S. labor market data, culminating with the December nonfarm payrolls report on Friday. Median expectations are +50k. Incoming jobs data may help clarify the policy outlook for the first half of the year.

S&P Global Manufacturing PMI (final) fell 0.4 points to 51.8 in December, versus 52.2 in November. “Although manufacturers continued to ramp up production in December, suggesting the goods producing sector will have contributed to further robust economic growth in the fourth quarter, prospects for the start of 2026 are looking less rosy," said Chris Williamson, Chief Business Economist at S&P Global Market Intelligence.


GOLD

OVERNIGHT CHANGE THROUGH 6:00 AM CT: +$67.55 (+1.56%)
5-Day Change: -$175.10 (-3.86%)
YTD Range: $4,324.76 - $4,402.22
52-Week Range: $2,621.42 - $4,532.71
Weighted Alpha: +64.08

Gold ended 2025 with a 65.9% gain, its best annual percentage performance since 1979. The yellow metal posted gains in 11 of 12 months in 2026. Only July saw a monthly decline, and it was a scant -0.38%.



This remarkable rally was fueled by factors including persistent geopolitical tensions, central bank buying, central bank easing campaigns, a weaker dollar, trade uncertainties under President Trump, and robust investor inflows into gold ETFs, positioning it as the top-performing major asset class for the year. These bullish factors are likely to remain in place early in the new year. 

Price action has been corrective to consolidative over the past week, which has relieved the overbought condition somewhat. The underlying trend remains bullish, and I'm encouraged by the fact that gold has thus far been unable to sustain tests below the 20-day moving average.

While it's premature to suggest a corrective low is in, investors will likely continue to look for buying opportunities on dips. I'm watching the 20-day MA at $4,344.92 on a close basis. A minor chart point at $4,308.75 protects the more important low for the week at $4,275.24. If the latter were to give way, potential to the $4,200 zone would have to be considered.

On the upside, today's failed test back above $4,400 reinforces the $4,403.98/$4,412.51 resistance zone, which is highlighted by the 30-Dec high and the halfway back point of the corrective decline. Penetration of this area is needed to ease pressure on the downside and provide some encouragement to the bull camp.

A breach of the 61.8% retracement level at $4,444.90 would clear the way for renewed tests above $4,500. Above that, the record high at $4,532.71 and the revised Fibonacci objective at $4,624.44 are in play. I still believe we can see $5,000 gold in Q1.


SILVER

OVERNIGHT CHANGE THROUGH 6:00 AM CT: +$2.750 (+3.85%)
5-Day Change: -$5.475 (-6.91%)
YTD Range: $71.429 - $74.552
52-Week Range: $28.565 - $86.637
Weighted Alpha: +180.09

Silver posted a gain of 146.7% in 2025, more than doubling the annual performance of gold. Like gold, it was the largest annual percentage gain since 1979. The white metal notched monthly gains in 10 of 12 months in 2025.

 

The stunning ascent was propelled by a confluence of surging industrial demand (from solar panels, EVs, AI components, and electronics), persistent supply deficits, massive ETF inflows exceeding 4,000 tons, safe-haven buying amid geopolitical tensions, global central bank easing, a weaker dollar, Fed rate cuts, and momentum trading that fueled repeated all-time highs and hair-raising volatility.

Broad trade uncertainty in 2025 was also a contributing factor. China, the world's second-largest miner and exporter of silver, implemented stricter silver export controls effective January 1, 2026. Exporters are now required to obtain special government licenses from the Ministry of Commerce, but only 44 approved large companies qualify.

While demand is expected to continue outpacing supply in 2026, which bodes well for the upside, arguably the market got ahead of itself in late 2025. I'd like to see the market consolidate in the $80/$65 range for several weeks. Once some reliable support levels have been established, the bulls are likely to start buying again with confidence.

So far, the $70 level is holding on the downside, but the 20-day MA around $68 may be a short-term attraction. A convincing breach of the 20-day would suggest potential down to the $65 zone.

Today's European high at $74.552 provides an intervening barrier ahead of $75 and recent highs at $76.403 (31-Dec) and $78.046 (30-Dec). The halfway back point of the recent correction comes in at $78.600 and is thought to be the key for reviving confidence in the underlying uptrend.


Peter A. Grant
Vice President, Senior Metals Strategist
Zaner Metals LLC
312-549-9986 Direct/Text
[email protected]
www.zanermetals.com

Non-Reliance and Risk Disclosure: The opinions expressed here are for general information purposes only and should not be construed as trade recommendations, nor a solicitation of an offer to buy or sell any precious metals product. The material presented is based on information that we consider reliable, but we do not represent that it is accurate, complete, and/or up-to-date, and it should not be relied on as such. Opinions expressed are current as of the time of posting and only represent the views of the author and not those of Zaner Metals LLC unless otherwise expressly noted.
 
Morning Metals Call
Friday, January 2, 2026

Good morning. The precious metals are higher in early U.S. trading.

Quote Board

U.S. calendar features S&P Global Manufacturing PMI.

Morning Metals Call
Wednesday, December 31, 2025
Good morning. The precious metals are lower in early U.S. trading. Volatility remains elevated, especially for silver and the PGMs in thin holiday conditions.
 
Quote Board
 
U.S. calendar features Initial Jobless Claims, EIA Data, Ag Prices.
Zaner Precious Metals Commentary
Tuesday, December 30, 2025

Gold and silver recover from Monday's sharp selloff

OUTSIDE MARKET DEVELOPMENTS: Risk appetite has waned into year-end as investors book profits. While precious metals have been particularly volatile, U.S. share prices are displaying some resilience.

US stock markets have traded only modestly lower so far this week, with major indices pulling back from recent record highs in light, holiday-thinned volume. Investors are reportedly locking in gains on big tech names and rotating to less overvalued sectors. 

President Trump met with Ukrainian President Zelenskyy at Mar-a-Lago on Sunday to discuss a proposed peace framework to end the war with Russia. Both leaders expressed optimism afterward that a deal was "maybe very close" despite persistent sticking points, particularly around territorial concessions in the Donbas region. Markets remain skeptical.

Geopolitical tensions remain broadly elevated heading into 2026. Top risks include the U.S. reshaping of trade/alliance relationships, intensified U.S.–China competition (especially in AI), the ongoing war in Ukraine, the tenuous ceasefire in Gaza, rising tensions between the U.S. and Venezuela, and the latest U.S. saber rattling toward Iran.

Fed funds futures continue to suggest the central bank's easing campaign will be on pause early in the new year. However, the trade continues to price in 50 bps of rate cuts in 2026, with the first 25 bps cut likely to come in June. The minutes from the December FOMC meeting will be released later today, but are not likely to provide any additional clarity.

The dollar index remains defensive, having set a 12-week low last week. The magnitude of the downside retracement has returned considerable credence to the long-term downtrend, despite expectations for lower rates next year, amid mounting fiscal pressures and concerns about debasement.

S&P/Case-Shiller 20-City Home Price Index declined 0.3% to 337.3 in October from 338.3 in September; +1.3% y/y. It was the fourth consecutive monthly decline.

FHFA Home Price Index rose 0.4% in October to a new record high at 436.8, above expectations of +0.1%, versus a revised 435.2 in September (was 435.4); +1.7% y/y, versus +1.8% in September.

Chicago PMI rebounded 7.2 points to 43.5 in December, above expectations of 39.5, versus 36.3 in November.


GOLD

OVERNIGHT CHANGE THROUGH 6:00 AM CT: +$52.50 (+1.21%)
5-Day Change: -$105.48 (-2.35%)
YTD Range: $2,607.16 - $4,549.77
52-Week Range: $2,599.23 - $4,549.77
Weighted Alpha: +65.16

Gold has rebounded modestly from Monday's selloff, but price action remains confined to yesterday's range. Heightened geopolitical tensions and a generally soft dollar provide support. Volatility, particularly in silver and the PGMs, is probably tempering bullish sentiment somewhat.



This week's losses are seen as corrective within the dominant uptrend. All of the fundamental factors that have gold on pace for its best year since 1979 are still very much in place, including sustained central bank buying, persistent ETF inflows, expectations of further Fed easing, geopolitical hedging, and a weakening dollar.

Monday's setback to the 20-day moving average is actually a healthy event, although I would have preferred it happen over the course of several sessions.

Today's probe back above $4,400 is encouraging to the bull camp. However, a breach of the halfway-back point of the retreat at $4,429.26 would help confirm the 20-day and Monday's low at $4,308.75 as key short-term support.

A fresh round of lows would suggest potential back to the $4,200 zone before renewed buying interest emerges. Look for gold to continue taking cues from the silver market.


SILVER

OVERNIGHT CHANGE THROUGH 6:00 AM CT: +$2.707 (+3.75%)
5-Day Change: +$4.776 (+6.68%)
YTD Range: $28.565 - $86.637
52-Week Range: $28.565 - $86.637
Weighted Alpha: +193.34

Silver is up nearly 7% today as extreme volatility continues. The white metal surged to a record high of $86.637 in Asian trading on Monday, before profit-taking and news of CME margin hikes triggered a sharp selloff in thin holiday conditions.



It's encouraging that silver was able to hold above support at $70.127/$70. However, the magnitude of recent volatility is likely to give pause to traders on both sides of the market heading into year-end. Clearly, that market went too far too fast.

That being said, the fundamentals remain broadly supportive, including strong industrial demand (especially in solar, EVs, and electronics), chronic supply deficits, massive speculative inflows, central bank interest, U.S. rate cuts, and heightened geopolitical hedging, and Chinese export controls slated to take effect on January 1. 

Ideally, I'd like to see a period of consolidation before the market starts testing the upside again. A breach of the midpoint of Monday's range at $78.600 is needed to clear the way for renewed tests above $80. Above the latter, the 61.8% retracement level at $80.496 would attract. New record highs would target $90 and $91.009.

On the downside, intraday supports at $75.133 and $74/$73.873 protect the more important $70.127/$70 area. Penetration of the latter would suggest additional corrective potential toward the rising 20-day moving average, currently around $66.


Peter A. Grant
Vice President, Senior Metals Strategist
Zaner Metals LLC
312-549-9986 Direct/Text
[email protected]
www.zanermetals.com

Non-Reliance and Risk Disclosure: The opinions expressed here are for general information purposes only and should not be construed as trade recommendations, nor a solicitation of an offer to buy or sell any precious metals product. The material presented is based on information that we consider reliable, but we do not represent that it is accurate, complete, and/or up-to-date, and it should not be relied on as such. Opinions expressed are current as of the time of posting and only represent the views of the author and not those of Zaner Metals LLC unless otherwise expressly noted.

Morning Metals Call
Monday, December 29, 2025

Good morning. The precious metals are sharply lower in early U.S. trading.

Quote Board

U.S. calendar features Pending Home Sales, Dallas Fed Index, EIA Data.

Zaner Precious Metals Commentary
Friday, December 26, 2025

Gold, silver, and platinum reach record levels in thin post-holiday trading

Outside Market Developments: Market conditions are thin with most European markets, and London closed for Boxing Day. Risk appetite remains elevated in post-Christmas trading, with investors eagerly anticipating a Santa Claus rally into early 2026.

The standout story today continues to be the blistering rally in precious metals, driven by investment demand, supply tightness, geopolitical risks, safe-haven interest, and the debasement trade. Gold, silver, and platinum all set record highs. Palladium traded above $2,000 for the first time in more than three years.

Despite this week's better-than-expected advance Q3 GDP and initial jobless claims prints, the trade continues to anticipate additional Fed easing in the new year. Fed funds futures are currently implying 56 bps of cuts by year-end 2026, with the first probably not until June.

Chairman Jerome Powell's term ends in May'26, and President Trump is widely expected to appoint an ardent dove who will facilitate his desire to run the economy hot. Kevin Warsh and Kevin Hassett are believed to be front-runners amid persistent worries about a loss of Fed independence.

The dollar remains defensive, weighed by monetary policy expectations, divergences with other central banks, and political and trade policy uncertainty. This is prompting foreign investors to rotate out of U.S. assets.



The dollar index set a 12-week low earlier in the week. More than 61.8% of the Sep-Nov corrective rally has now been retraced, suggesting the dominant downtrend is reasserting itself. A breach of the 97.20/12 zone would clear the way for a retest of the 96.22 low from 17-Sep.


GOLD

OVERNIGHT CHANGE THROUGH 6:00 AM CT: +$30.33 (+0.68%)
5-Day Change: +$187.66 (+4.32%)
YTD Range: $2,607.16 - $4,532.71
52-Week Range: $2,597.53 - $4,532.71
Weighted Alpha: +75.13

Gold continues to push into uncharted territory, probing above $4,500 in thin post-holiday trading conditions. The yellow metal is poised for a third consecutive higher weekly close.



Gold is now up 74% year-to-date, on par with the post-gold-standard record gains in 1972, 1973, and 1974. The record annual gain occurred in 1979, when the yellow metal surged more than 130% amid soaring inflation, the Iranian Revolution and hostage crisis, and the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan.

With the $4,515.63 Fibonacci objective exceeded, focus shifts to the next Fibonacci threshold at $4,686.61. Beyond the latter, a measuring objective at $4,729 and the $5,000 target are looking increasingly attractive with attainment possible in Q1'26.

Initial support is marked by Wednesday's high at $4,525.37, which protects the $4503.80/4500.00 level. Friday's Asian low at $4,469.38 appears to be well protected for now. Focus is likely to remain on buying strategies into next week, although there could be some profit-taking ahead of year-end. 


SILVER

OVERNIGHT CHANGE THROUGH 6:00 AM CT: +$2.558 (+3.56%)
5-Day Change: +$8.175 (+12.18%)
YTD Range: $28.565 - $75.618
52-Week Range: $28.565 - $75.618
Weighted Alpha: +195.25

Silver is up more than 5% in thin post-holiday trading and on track for its fifth straight higher weekly close. The white metal continues to be spurred by bullish supply/demand dynamics, AI/tech sector optimism, expectations for looser monetary policy next year, a weak dollar, and robust investment demand.



Silver's weighted alpha reading is approaching 200, signalling exceptionally strong and accelerating bullish momentum. I've never seen a weighted alpha reading this high in the metals!

The rise above $75 shifts focus to the next Fibonacci objective at $77.770. Beyond that, $80 would be in play.

Minor intraday support is found at $75.00/$74.92. Below that, Wednesday's high at $72.704 protects more substantial support at $70.229/127. The latter looks to be out of play at this point, although year-end profit-taking remains a downside risk. That being said, I sure wouldn't want to try to pick a top in this market.

PGMs

Platinum surged to new record highs above $2,400, driven by fundamentals similar to those in the silver market. The market is experiencing its third consecutive annual deficit (estimated at 692,000 ounces, or nearly 9% of demand). Production is heavily concentrated in South Africa (~70-80%), which has faced disruptions from political instability, heavy rains, flooding, persistent power issues, and declining ore grades.

On the demand side, President Trump ended Federal tax credits for electric vehicles, and his "drill baby drill" policies have driven down the price of gasoline, dimming the appeal of EVs. Additionally, the EU succumbed to intense pressure from German and Italian automakers, softening its edict for a 100% reduction in tailpipe CO₂ emissions by 2035.

These factors combine to support longer-term demand for hybrids and conventional internal combustion vehicles, although this is likely to occur with ever-higher emission standards and therefore higher PGM loading.

Palladium tested above $2,000 for the first time since November 2022.

Peter A. Grant
Vice President, Senior Metals Strategist
Zaner Metals LLC
312-549-9986 Direct/Text
[email protected]
www.zanermetals.com

Non-Reliance and Risk Disclosure: The opinions expressed here are for general information purposes only and should not be construed as trade recommendations, nor a solicitation of an offer to buy or sell any precious metals product. The material presented is based on information that we consider reliable, but we do not represent that it is accurate, complete, and/or up-to-date, and it should not be relied on as such. Opinions expressed are current as of the time of posting and only represent the views of the author and not those of Zaner Metals LLC unless otherwise expressly noted.

Zaner Precious Metals Commentary
Monday, December 22, 2025

Gold and silver start the last full week of the year with fresh record highs

OUTSIDE MARKET DEVELOPMENTS: Markets begin the last full trading week of the year in risk-on mode. U.S. equity indexes are higher, despite thin pre-holiday conditions, with tech-heavy sectors leading the way.

Investors have rushed back into AI-related stocks following a short-lived pullback earlier in December. This surge underscores persistent enthusiasm for AI infrastructure and breakthroughs in agentic AI as we approach 2026, even amid elevated valuations.

Last week's evidence of cooling inflation boosted bets for further Fed easing in 2026. Fed funds futures suggest the central bank will likely be on pause in Q1'26, with a 25-bps cut not fully priced in until the June FOMC meeting.

Fed Governor Miran told Bloomberg this morning that he believes recent data warrants a more dovish tilt by his peers. He said he has not yet decided if he will advocate for a 50 or 25 bps cut in January.

Geopolitical tensions in the Western Hemisphere have risen to levels not seen since the Cuban Missile Crisis in 1962.  Lethal strikes by the U.S. on alleged drug boats, seizures of oil tankers, and a declared blockade on sanctioned oil exports are seen as violations of Venezuela's sovereignty by President Nicolás Maduro and some of his allies. Polymarket puts the probability of President Trump invoking war powers by January 31, 2026, at 22%.

The threat of armed conflict or war between the U.S. and Venezuela is actively contributing to the debasement trade, as it would likely increase deficit spending. The debasement trade involves investors shifting into hard assets like gold, silver, and sometimes bitcoin to hedge against fiat currency erosion, driven by high government debt, monetary easing, and geopolitical instability that heightens flight-to-safety trades.

Chicago Fed National Activity Index improved to -0.21 in September, versus a revised -0.31 in August (was -0.12). It was the sixth straight negative print.


GOLD

OVERNIGHT CHANGE THROUGH 6:00 AM CT: +$70.99 (+01.64%)
5-Day Change: +$128.92 (+2.99%)
YTD Range: $2,607.16 - $4,442.03
52-Week Range: $2,597.53 - $4,442.03
Weighted Alpha: +70.22

Gold was on the bid right from the Asian open, surging to new all-time highs above $4,381.21. The yellow metal was able to extend in London and U.S. trading as well, spurred by surging silver, Fed easing expectations for 2026, a softer dollar, and heightened safe-haven interest.



Waging war is an expensive proposition, so rising tensions between the U.S. and Venezuela are stoking the already well-established debasement trade. The U.S. national debt is expected to crest the $40 trillion threshold in H2'26, sooner if war breaks out. Annual debt servicing costs are already around $1 trillion, and are expected to be above that on a sustained basis moving forward.

Debasing the dollar is the easiest way to run huge deficits without raising taxes or cutting spending. As always, Congress will take the easy way out: Don't pass a budget and trust that the Fed will continue debasing the dollar to keep the plates spinning.

Today's push above $4,400 lends confidence to the $4,515.63 Fibonacci objective. Beyond that, the long-standing $5,000 objective becomes increasingly attractive.

Intraday support at $4,406.39 protects the previous highs at $4,381.21 and today's Asian low at $4,338.42. More substantial support is defined by last week's low at $4,272.52.


SILVER

OVERNIGHT CHANGE THROUGH 6:00 AM CT: +$1.961 (+2.92%)
5-Day Change: +$4.673 (+7.29%)
YTD Range: $28.565 - $69.446
52-Week Range: $28.565 - $69.446
Weighted Alpha: +161.10

Silver surged to yet another round of new record highs, bringing $70 within striking distance. The uptrend in the white metal is relentless.



Heightened safe-haven interest and resurgent confidence in the AI sector – despite sky-high valuations – are adding to the upside momentum. Sure, the market is overbought, but small markets like silver can act irrationally for extended periods of time.

The $68.868 Fibonacci objective was satisfied and exceeded. Sights are now on $70, with today's intraday high at $69.446 providing a minor intervening barrier. Beyond $70, the next Fibonacci level comes in at $73.668.

Initial support at $68.146 extends down to $68. Friday's high at $67.452 protects today's Asian low at $67.161. More substantial support is well protected at $64.673/529.

I am not going to write on Christmas Eve, so the next issue of the newsletter will be out on Friday.

Season's greetings from the Zaner Metals team!



Peter A. Grant
Vice President, Senior Metals Strategist
Zaner Metals LLC
312-549-9986 Direct/Text
[email protected]
www.zanermetals.com

Non-Reliance and Risk Disclosure: The opinions expressed here are for general information purposes only and should not be construed as trade recommendations, nor a solicitation of an offer to buy or sell any precious metals product. The material presented is based on information that we consider reliable, but we do not represent that it is accurate, complete, and/or up-to-date, and it should not be relied on as such. Opinions expressed are current as of the time of posting and only represent the views of the author and not those of Zaner Metals LLC unless otherwise expressly noted.