I’ve told you before that back in the 1980s when I first got into this business, one of my favorite reads regarding the market was a weekly one-page cocoa futures report that I received via snail mail. That report cut right to the chase, with no fluff. Just bullet points on bullish and bearish elements presently impacting the cocoa futures market. So here goes on my effort to replicate that report but focusing on gold (GCZ25) and silver (SIU25) markets. At the end I’ll give you my biases on price direction.
Lower U.S. interest rates are likely coming, and lower rates are also likely to come in other major economies. That suggests better global economic growth and in turn, better consumer and commercial demand for raw commodities, including precious metals. Lower interest rates mean lower bond yields, which are also bullish for gold and silver.
Near-term technicals remain firmly overall bullish for both gold and silver markets. Price action recently has been sideways and choppy for both metals, but at still historically elevated levels. Longer-term charts show gold and silver still in solid price uptrends, dating back to 2016 for gold and back to 2022 for silver.
The U.S. dollar index ($DXY) has backed down from its August high and is starting to trend down on the daily bar chart. The weakening U.S. dollar index is friendly for the metals, as the USDX is an important outside-market element for gold and silver markets’ daily price direction.
A move by BRICS countries away from the U.S. dollar for their global financing. That’s bearish for the U.S. dollar, which is in turn friendly for the metals, as a weaker USDX is a friendly daily outside-market element for gold and silver. Also, some countries are replacing their U.S. dollar reserves in part with gold reserves.
Geopolitical tensions are never far away from the front burner of the marketplace, and any new development that creates uncertainty would prompt keener safe-haven buying of gold and silver.
The Bear Case for Gold and Silver
Both gold and silver are in mature, or perhaps very mature, bull market runs. The bulls may be running low on fuel to extend the price uptrends. History shows raw commodity markets are cyclical, meaning going through cycles of boom and bust. The metals are in a boom cycle now, but a bust cycle is coming. We just don’t know when.
Gold and silver markets have seen their near-term price uptrends stall out as prices grind sideways on the daily bar charts. There are stiff overhead technical resistance levels in gold and silver, at this year’s highs, which must be overcome for the bulls to gain fresh energy to extend the price uptrends.
New record highs scored in the major U.S. stock indexes just today are bearish for gold and silver, from a competing asset class perspective.
Where Are Gold and Silver Prices Headed Next? The Bull and Bear Cases.