Zaner Precious Metals Commentary
Wednesday, February 11, 2026Gold and silver set new weekly highs, despite dimmed hopes for an H1 Fed rate cut
Outside Market Developments: U.S. nonfarm payrolls rose 130k in January, above expectations of +70k, versus a revised +48k in December (was +50k). The jobless rate ticked down to 4.3% from 4.4%.
Despite recent weak data and mounting concerns about job growth, January saw the largest increase in jobs in 13 months. Job gains were primarily driven by sectors such as health care, social assistance, and construction, while the federal government and financial activities saw declines.
Federal government employment fell by 34k in January, pushing the cumulative decline since the start of the Trump administration to roughly -325k jobs. The White House was quick to tout that federal jobs now represent their smallest share of the total workforce since 1966, framing the reductions as a successful "rightsizing" of the bureaucracy.
Total back-month revisions of -17k painted 2025 as an exceptionally weak year for job growth, averaging just +15k per month. Nonetheless, January's surprise beat has some of the more optimistic analysts believing the worst of the labor market slowdown is behind us.
Fed funds future sold off on the news, reflecting an even less dovish bias for H1, sapping risk appetite. The market is still anticipating about 50 bps of easing this year, with the first 25 bps cut unlikely before September.
More broadly, U.S. yields are higher today, though the dollar remained defensive following the news early in the week that China accelerated its long-term de-dollarization efforts by urging domestic banks to limit purchases and gradually reduce holdings of U.S. Treasuries. The dollar index fell to new lows for the week, and almost exactly 61.8% of the recent rally has now been retraced.
President Trump hinted that he might deploy a second carrier group to the Middle East if ongoing negotiations with the Iranian regime falter. Israeli President Netanyahu is meeting with Trump in Washington today to push for any deal to include Iran's missile program and Iranian proxies. Although both sides have engaged in saber-rattling that has heightened regional tensions, diplomatic efforts continue to move forward.
GOLD
OVERNIGHT CHANGE THROUGH 6:00 AM CT: +$87.08 (+1.73%)
5-Day Change: +$84.85 (+1.71%)
YTD Range: $4,310.83 - $5,595.02
52-Week Range: $2,835.23 - $5,595.02
Weighted Alpha: +80.92
Gold set new two-week highs, buoyed by persistent safe-haven demand, firmer silver, and dollar weakness. The yellow metal is also displaying some resilience in the face of today's solid NFP print and dimmed hopes for an H1 Fed rate cut.
With gold holding above the 20-day MA and the midpoint of the recent broad range, I suspect bull camp optimism is on the rise. However, the scale of the recent volatility likely still gives them some hesitation.
Today's early U.S. high at $5,117.94 now provides an intervening barrier ahead of the 61.8% retracement level of the recent plunge at $5,141.08. Penetration of the latter would bode well for tests above $5,200 and would go a long way toward confirming the corrective low is in place at $4,406.69. The next Fibonacci level on the upside is at $5,340.72 (78.6%).
Today's Asian low at $5,024.35 stands in front of the midpoint of the range at $5,000.85. Secondary supports marked by the lows from the previous two days at $4,992.10 and $4,966.62 protect the rising 20-day MA at $4,938.07.
At this point, I wouldn't rule out risk for tests below $4,800. However, short-term dips within the range are likely to be viewed as buying opportunities, given the broadly supportive underlying fundamentals; persistent central bank buying, ongoing geopolitical uncertainties, de-dollarization trends, and expectations of lower real interest rates over the medium term.
SILVER
OVERNIGHT CHANGE THROUGH 6:00 AM CT: +$5.307 (+6.57%)
5-Day Change: -$5.157 (-5.85%)
YTD Range: $64.14 - $121.630
52-Week Range: $28.565 - $121.630
Weighted Alpha: +179.59
Silver firmed to reach new highs for the week, above $86 in early U.S. trading, helped by a weak dollar and strength in gold. While the white metal retreated into the intraday range after the jobs report, I'm impressed by the resilience and the relative calm so far this week. I joked with my colleagues yesterday that the daily range was shockingly less than $4!
As noted above, gold has retraced nearly 61.8% of the recent correction, but silver has completed just a 38.2% retracement. Gold's relative strength is reflected in the gold/silver ratio, which is nearly 40% off the late-January low of 43.57.
Today's robust jobs report underscored economic resilience while sharply diminishing prospects for imminent Fed rate cuts, elevating Treasury yields. Increased borrowing costs, in turn, pressure valuations for growth-focused technology stocks and increase the financial burden of substantial capital expenditures planned by numerous AI firms.
Silver is an important component in electronics and AI infrastructure. If higher borrowing costs throttle AI capex, it could pose a headwind for demand.
Despite the stunning magnitude of the recent plunge (nearly 50%, high to low), the underlying fundamentals remain supportive. Those include strong and growing industrial demand – particularly in solar photovoltaics, electric vehicles, electronics, and green energy applications – persistent supply deficits, investor buying as a monetary hedge, and its dual role as both a precious metal safe-haven and an industrial commodity.
Today's gains bode well for short-term tests back above $90. The next significant resistances are at $90.392 (05-Feb high), $92.186 (4-Feb high), and, perhaps most importantly, the convergence of the 20-day MA with the halfway back point of the entire decline at $92.380/885.
The $80.018/00 support zone will be bolstered by the rising 50-day MA by the end of the week, but the bulls shouldn't be lulled into a false sense of security by the diminished volatility. If we've learned anything over the past three weeks, it's that the silver market can let go with little to no warning, and it is an extraordinarily unforgiving market when it does.
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.












