Zaner Precious Metals Commentary
Wednesday, February 25, 2026Gold rebounds from Tuesday's setback, buoyed by haven interest, softer dollar, surging silver
OUTSIDE MARKET DEVELOPMENTS: Last night's State of the Union address added to already high levels of uncertainty, particularly in financial markets and among investors. The lengthy speech – the longest on record at nearly 1 hour 48 minutes – focused heavily on touting economic victories, immigration enforcement, and patriotism while defending aggressive tariff policies amid recent legal setbacks. The address offered no major surprises to calm nerves, instead reinforcing an unpredictable policy landscape ahead of midterms.
President Trump reaffirmed his plan to impose temporary global tariffs of 15% under an alternative authority after the Supreme Court struck down the prior broader regime. This has amplified existing trade policy volatility, with analysts noting renewed jitters over potential higher costs for businesses and consumers, supply chain disruptions, and retaliatory actions from trading partners.
Trump emphasised his desire for a diplomatic resolution with Iran, but his address was laced with threats and red lines. A third round of indirect talks begins in Geneva on Thursday. Meanwhile, the U.S. continues to build up military forces within striking distance of Iran, described as the most significant since the 2003 Iraq invasion
Nonetheless, the market is in risk-on mode today as attention turns to NVIDIA's highly anticipated earnings report after the market close. NVIDIA is viewed as a bellwether for the AI sector, and analysts are anticipating massive profit growth, perhaps as high at +70% y/y. This would bolster broader AI sentiment, at least temporarily alleviating overvaluation concerns as a headwind.
Yesterday's better-than-expected consumer confidence report is helping the cause. “Confidence ticked up in February after falling in January, as consumers’ pessimistic expectations for the future eased somewhat,” said Dana M Peterson, Chief Economist at The Conference Board.
This week's chaos in Mexico – stemming from the killing of a cartel kingpin and that cartel's retaliation – has largely subsided, with flights resuming, public transportation reopening, and the U.S. State Department declaring conditions "returned to normal." However, experts are warning of potential lingering instability stemming from ongoing power struggles within the cartel.
Japan PM Takaichi has nominated two dovish academics to the Bank of Japan board, which heightened concerns that further interest rate hikes by the BOJ would be delayed or limited. This put additional pressure on the yen, after Takaichi expressed reservations earlier this week about further rate increases.
Yen weakness is helping to underpin the dollar. Nonetheless, gains in the dollar index since the late-January low are still seen as corrective within the longer-term downtrend.
GOLD
OVERNIGHT CHANGE THROUGH 6:00 AM CT: +$37.67 (+0.73%)
5-Day Change: +$224.66 (+4.51%)
YTD Range: $4,310.83 - $5,595.02
52-Week Range: $2,835.23 - $5,595.02
Weighted Alpha: +86.67
Gold has rebounded from Tuesday's setback amid ongoing trade and geopolitical risk, with help from a softer dollar and soaring silver. The yellow metal remains confined to yesterday's range at this point, but the underlying fundamentals and technicals are broadly positive.
While dollar strength poses a short-term headwind, a breach of Tuesday's high at $5,259.54 would bode well for an upside extension to $5,300 and the $5,340.72 Fibonacci level (78.6% retracement). An eventual penetration of the latter would go a long way toward confirming potential for new all-time highs above $5,595.02.
Previously established objectives at $5,675.25, $5,700, $5,800 remain valid. A newer Fibonacci projection at $5,918.25 would draw gold within striking distance of $6,000.
With gold tracking above the important moving averages, setbacks within the well-established range are likely to be viewed as buying opportunities. However, short to near-term volatility is likely to remain a challenge.
Today's overseas low at $5,127.41 marks first support. The more important levels to watch are the low for the week from Tuesday at $5,097.51 and the 20-day moving average at $5,011.75.
SILVER
OVERNIGHT CHANGE THROUGH 6:00 AM CT: +$3.323 (+3.81%)
5-Day Change: +$13.431 (+17.40%)
YTD Range: $64.140 - $121.630
52-Week Range: $28.565 - $121.630
Weighted Alpha: +214.41
Silver has surged to trade back above $90 for the first time in four weeks, spurred by persistent haven interest, revived optimism about the tech/AI sector, unrest in Mexico, and a weaker dollar. The white metal is already up nearly 8% this week, on the heels of a more than 9% gain last week.
Strong earnings from NVIDIA after the close today will likely perpetuate the rebound in silver, which favors a challenge of $92.885, the midpoint of the huge $121.630/$64.140 range. The high for February at $92.186 provides an intervening barrier.
If silver can clear the halfway back point of the January/February plunge, a return to the $100 zone becomes likely. This level is reinforced by the 61.8% retracement level at $99.668.
According to Heraeus, the Perth Mint’s sales of silver bars and coins surged 188% m/m in January, to 1.7Mmoz, while gold sales fell by 19% to 29koz. This is "consistent with price-sensitive retail buyers jumping into silver as it outperformed gold during the price rally."
Certainly, those retail customers were rattled by the subsequent rout, but physical buyers tend to have more conviction than investors in paper (digital) representations of precious metals. They are likely to be reemboldened upon a rebound above $100.
Heraeus also noted that Hecla Mining Company "is leaning harder into its 'silver-first' positioning." Hecla agreed to sell its
Casa Berardi gold mine in Quebec, Canada, along with nearby exploration properties, to Orezone Gold Corporation. Hecla CEO Rob Krcmarov described it as an "important milestone" to concentrate capital and operations on "world-class silver assets" for better returns on invested capital and long-term value creation.
There seems to be a growing commitment to continued silver outperformance. The rebound in the gold/silver ratio stalled above 70, and signs of renewed weakness are evident. The ratio is trading below 58 today. A move below 50 would bode well for a retest of the January low at 43.573, with potential as low as the 31.707 low from 2011.
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.













