Gold and silver are marginally higher heading into the European open

Gold and silver are marginally higher heading into the European open

It has been another indecisive session for gold and silver overnight as they trade within their ranges. The yellow metal trades 0.04% higher at $1781/oz and silver is back above the psychological $26/oz handle but flat. It is once again copper stealing the show as the red metal trades 1.35% in the black and the base metal is very close to hitting $4.50/lb.

Risk sentiment was mixed overnight. The Nikkei 225 (-0.42%) and ASX (-0.17%) fell while the Shanghai Composite bucked the trend to trade just above flat.

There was no real movement in FX markets as the dollar index moved 0.07% higher and the biggest moving FX pair was USD/CHF which pushed 0.17% higher.

Looking at some of the headlines overnight, Brazillian Iron ore producer Vale said they expect supply to increase with demand moving in the other direction.

Chinese Industrial Profits hit +92.3% y/yvs prior +20.1% y/y March.

US Senator Manchin wants Biden's infrastructure bill split in 2 to increase the chance of passing

UK to propose COVID-19 vaccination 'passports' for international travel at the G7 meeting

The BoJ kept rates unchanged at -0.10% and QQE and YCC maintained to target a 0.00% rate for the 10-year JGB. The BoJ also lowered its core CPI forecast to 0.10% from 0.50% for the current year. It also raised next years forecast to 0.80% from 0.70%

As Tesla had an earnings call yesterday boss Elon Musk said he is still holding all of his Bitcoin. BTC/USD has moved 1.23% higher overnight to trade at $54,702.

The FT have reported that Chilean miners are worried they will not be able to keep up with the current copper demand.

Looking ahead to the rest of the session highlights include the Riksbank rate decision, U.S. CB consumer confidence, weekly API's and comments from BoC Gov Macklem.
 

By Rajan Dhall

For Kitco News

Kinesis Money the cheapest place to buy/sell Gold and Silver with Free secure storage

 

David

Gold is trading marginally lower heading into the European open

Gold is trading marginally lower heading into the European open

Gold and silver are started the European session slightly lower this morning following any major lack of direction in the Asia Pac session. The yellow metal trades at $1776/oz just under flat while silver has dropped nearly half a percent to trade at the 25.87/oz area. Copper has broken a big resistance at the previous wave high to trade at its highest level since August 2011

Risk sentiment in the Asia Pac area was mixed. The Nikkei 225 (0.36%) closed higher while the ASX (-0.21%) and Shanghai Composite (-0.77%) both fell. Having said that markets in Taiwan, South Korea and India all performed well.

In the FX markets, the dollar index moved 0.06% lower and the biggest mover was AUD/USD which recorded a gain of 0.20%. This was closely followed by GBP/USD which is currently trading 0.19% in the black. Spot WTI has moved 1% lower and BTC/USD jumped over 7% to hit $52932.

Look at some of the news stories, the EU is leaning on the UK to align UK food standards to EU food and safety rules. There is also a bargain on offer if the UK take a deal. Apparently, in return the EU is offering easing import and exports checks between Britain and Northern Ireland.

Over in the U.S., swing Democratic Senator Manchin backs Republican smaller infrastructure proposals. Manchin spoke over the weekend and said he would support a more targeted version of Biden's $2 trillion infrastructure package. Adding to this story U.S. Senator Graham republican support could exist if the was $800-900 bln.

Bank of England (BoE) Dep Gov Broadbent sees "very rapid" economic growth at least over the next couple of quarters. There was also a note of caution as he said "it's going to be quite noisy and bumpy this year".

Looking ahead to the rest of the session highlights include German Ifo, U.S. durable goods data, commest from ECB's Panetta and Lane.

By Rajan Dhall

For Kitco News

 

Kinesis Money the cheapest place to buy/sell Gold and Silver with Free secure storage

 

David

Can massive bitcoin selloff push gold price above $1,800 next week?

Can massive bitcoin selloff push gold price above $1,800 next week?

Gold attempted to tackle the $1,800 an ounce this week — a level, which once breached, could help get the precious metal above $1,900 an ounce, according to analysts.

Even though the attack on $1,800 was unsuccessful for now, analysts remain optimistic on gold's near-term price direction. The positive outlook is largely due to two drivers — the recent bitcoin selloff and U.S. President Joe Biden's plan to nearly double the capital gains tax rate for wealthy Americans.

At the time of writing, June Comex gold futures were trading at $1,776.90, flat on the week.

"We can get a move in gold after seeing the double-bottom. And next week might be the catalyst to push the precious metal higher due to bitcoin's drop and Biden tax announcement," RJO Futures senior commodities broker Daniel Pavilonis told Kitco News.
 

Bitcoin selloff

The popular cryptocurrency was down more than 9% on Friday, heading for the worst week in almost two months. At the time of writing, bitcoin was trading at $50,045, down 5.62% on the day.

This renewed negative volatility in bitcoin could prove beneficial to gold, which has been losing the popularity battle against bitcoin.

"Bitcoin chart looks a bit negative. Bitcoin has been one of the reasons that held gold back. Some natural buyers of gold have been buyers of bitcoin. And if bitcoin stays down, next push higher in gold could see more sponsorship, and the precious metal could take some people back from bitcoin," said LaSalle Futures Group senior market strategist Charlie Nedoss.

Bitcoin's $48,000 level is important to keep an eye on. "This is where I saw chart support," said Nedoss. "Bitcoin could trade down to $43,000 — that is where the 200-day moving average is. The cryptocurrency hasn't traded below $45,000 since breaching it back in February."

Nedoss added that if $54,000 can hold, it would be positive for bitcoin.

Biden's capital-gains tax increase

Biden's proposal means that the federal tax rates for some investors could be as high as 43.4%, Bloomberg reported citing people familiar with the matter.

"Some of the highest capital-gains taxes around the world are in the 30% mark. Most are around 20%. This is an overreach. And with Biden's infrastructure spending plans, we could be looking at stagflation," Pavilonis said. Stagflation is a period of inflation combined with a decline in GDP.

Biden's plan is impacting equities, cryptocurrencies, and most importantly, the U.S. dollar, which has an inverse relationship to gold.

"The dollar does not seem to be liking a lot of the policies coming out of Washington, including the Biden administration's proposed new capital-gains tax increase. Also, one of the next big initiatives is infrastructure spending. Both of those factors are hurting the dollar, and that is positive for gold," said Gainesville Coins precious metals expert Everett Millman.

If the tax structure becomes less favorable for those investors holding a lot of capital priced in U.S. dollars, they are going to find other places to put their money, Millman explained. "If the capital gains tax makes the U.S. a less favorable destination, there will be less incentive for people to hold money in U.S. dollars. That is going to hurt the purchasing power of the dollar generally," Millman said.

Also, markets are not forgetting about inflation, which is said to be a major driver for gold later this year. "Inflation expectations are the highest they have been in years. We have not seen a lot of measured inflation yet because the velocity of money is pretty low. But with infrastructure spending coming up, markets think that at some point, this will boost inflation," Millman added.

Getting through $1,800

Pavilonis noted that once we get above $1,800, gold's moves higher could become bigger due to fewer resistance levels.

"Gold and silver would do very well. We are set up for a longer run higher here in gold. If we close above $1,800, we can move up quickly towards $1,900," he said.

For gold to get past the $1,800 level, the U.S. dollar index would have to drop below 90, noted Nedoss. "On the week, gold hasn't done too bad. As long as we close above $1,765, it will be a positive week," he said. "We would need to see the U.S. dollar put in new lows to take out $1,800. Might need the 89 handle in the dollar index."

The reason why $1,800 is proving to be a strong resistance level is that the $1,806 level is the 100-day moving average for gold. "It's possible to hit $1,800. With all this inflation talk, I am surprised gold is not doing better," Nedoss said.

Millman noted that if $1,800 is breached, there is "a ton of room for gold to rally towards its highs in the $1,900 range."

However, for next week, one thing to be aware of is potentially downward pressure coming from positive macroeconomic data, Millman warned.

"We have seen some green shoots in manufacturing. A lot of short-term reactions to economic data will be bad for gold and good for the broader economy. The $1,800 is pretty strong resistance level that bulls would have to fight to push gold above it."
 

Data to watch

There is a slate of macroeconomic data to keep an eye on next week. The most-watched event will be the Federal Reserve's monetary policy meeting, which concludes on Wednesday and will be followed by the central bank Chair Jerome Powell's press conference.

"The Fed is set to leave monetary policy unchanged – rates remaining in the 0-0.25% range and QE monthly asset purchases at $120 billion – with policymakers set to re-affirm there will be no shift in stance until 'substantial further progress' on the recovery," said ING chief international economist James Knightley.

Also, the Bank of Japan will be making its interest rate announcement on Tuesday.

Thursday will be an important day to monitor on the data front, with the U.S. GDP Q1 preliminary numbers, jobless claims, and pending home sales on the docket.

"Q1 GDP report is likely to show another fantastic growth figure, led by stimulus fuelled consumer spending. We are expecting annualized growth of 7.4%," Knightley added.

Analysts will also be monitoring the U.S. durable goods orders on Monday, house price index and CB consumer confidence on Tuesday, as well as the PCE price index on Friday.
 

On top of all the data releases, Biden is scheduled to make his first speech to a joint session of Congress on Wednesday. Markets will be looking for more details about his tax hike plans.

 

By Anna Golubova

For Kitco News

Kinesis Money the cheapest place to buy/sell Gold and Silver with Free secure storage

 

David

Gold closes the week in-essence unchanged

Gold closes the week in-essence unchanged

Gold futures basis the most active June 2021 Comex contract opened on Monday morning in Australia at $1778.80 and today closed down – $5.50 (-0.31%) and is currently fixed at $1776.50. While gold had just under a $50 trading range during the week, by Friday’s close, gold futures lost only $2.20. The June contract traded to a high this week of $1798.80 and a low of $1764.40.

In the case of today’s fractional decline, it was an uptick in the yields of the U.S. 10-year Treasury note, as well as robust data regarding strong new home sales, which was credited as responsible for the decline.

Yesterday the U.S. Census Bureau reported that new home sales as viewed through a seasonally adjusted annual rate came in at 1,021,000 in March. This is the fastest growth of new home sales since 2006.

As reported by Markets Insider, “In the bond market, treasuries once again showed a lack of direction before ending the day in the red. As a result, the yield on the benchmark ten-year note, which moves opposite of its price, inch up by 1.3 basis points to 1.567 percent.”

According to Reuters, “Ten-year yields have stabilized and the inflation rebound to 2.6%, well above target, is likely to be short-lived. Still, swaps show that market expectations of future inflation are rising, and that means Treasury volatility may not be over yet.”

Even with strong tailwinds from dollar weakness today, gold prices were still unable to close positively on the day. The dollar index lost 52 points in trading on Friday, closing at 90.80, a net decline of -0.57%. The U.S. dollar has now closed lower on a weekly basis for the last three consecutive weeks. Four weeks ago, on the week of March 29, the dollar index closed at approximately 92.90. Since the last week of March to current pricing the dollar index has lost roughly 2.1%.

Concurrently gold prices over the last four trading weeks had risen from the second of a double bottom which occurred during the week of March 29 when gold traded to a low of $1677, to the high this week of $1798.80. In the last four trading weeks, gold has had a range of over $100, and even with this week’s fractional decline has had a significant gain throughout the month of April.

 

The week in review

When we look at the price changes that occurred this week in gold, it is obvious that a number of fundamental events had an opposing influence on pricing. At the beginning of the week, gains were the result of a renewed concern of recent upticks in Covid-19 infections, pointing to a contraction in the growth of the global economy. India experienced the highest surge in new infections, surpassing 300,000 daily reported cases on Thursday. During the latter part of the week, gold prices declined as a result of higher yields in 10-year notes and solid economic data in the United States.
 

By Gary Wagner

Contributing to kitco.com

Kinesis Money the cheapest place to buy/sell Gold and Silver with Free secure storage

 

David

Gold and silver move marginally lower heading into the European open

Gold and silver move marginally lower heading into the European open

Gold and silver are trading marginally lower on the last trading day of the week. The yellow metal sold off before it could make a meaningful test of the $1800/oz area. Silver is still holding on to the psychological $26/oz area.

Risk sentiment was mixed overnight. The Nikkei 225 closed just over half a percent lower while the ASX (0.08%) and Shanghai Composite (0.15%) both moved slightly higher. US sentiment took a hit late in the session after Biden hinted at a capital gains tax rise to as much as 43.4%.

In the FX markets, the dollar index (0.10%) has moved lower once again and trades at 91.18. The biggest mover overnight was AUD/USD which trades around 0.27% higher along with NZD/USD which is a closed second at 0.26%. Copper has had another good session pushing up 0.83% and oil is just under half a percent in the black.

In terms of news, BOJ Gov Kuroda says too early discuss timing, means of exit from ultra-easy policy. This is nothing new really.

On the geopolitical front, China's Global Times tweets UK is lying, violating international law, interfering with China.

On the data front, we had the Japanese preliminary PMIs for April. Manufacturing came in at 53.3 (prior 52.7) & services hit 48.3 (prior 48.3), this morning UK March retail sales printed at +5.4% vs +1.5% m/m expected. Australia PMIs (preliminary, April) manufacturing 59.6 (prior 56.8) & services 58.6 (prior 55.5)

Japan finance minister Aso says discussing support policies for the upcoming State of Emergency due to another rise in coronavirus infections.

Use of Johnson & Johnson vaccine in the US expected to be approved again as soon as this weekend

Bitcoin dipped below 50K overnight and some crypto analysts are attributing the move to the fact that rumours of US tax on cryptocurrencies persistently arise.

Looking ahead to the rest of the session highlights include PMI's from the major nations, Russian interest rate decision, U.S. new home sales. We could also get comments from ECB's President Lagarde and German Buba's Wuermeling.

 

By Rajan Dhall

For Kitco News

Kinesis Money the cheapest place to buy/sell Gold and Silver with Free secure storage

 

David

Gold moves slightly lower heading into the European open

Gold moves slightly lower heading into the European open

After another move higher during Wednesday's session gold is heading into today's European session 0.14% lower. Silver (-0.28%) is also slightly down but this pales in comparison to the 2.81% gain yesterday.

After a strong close on Wall Street yesterday the ASX (0.83%) and Nikkei 225 (2.38%) bounced back from some recent weakness. The Shanghai Composite did not move in the same vein as it closed -0.38% lower overnight.

FX markets were pretty dull, the biggest mover was NZD/USD which only moved 0.15% lower. The dollar index starts the session just under flat. In the rest of the commodities complex, copper is 0.39% down and spot WTI has moved 0.13% higher. Lastly, BTC/USD has bounced slightly to trade 1.32% in the black.

In terms of news, China's Global Times says Australia is to face serious consequences for unreasonable provocation against China.

The Canadian court is to adjourn Huawei's Meng Wanzhou extradition hearing to August.

Australian Q1 business confidence moved higher to hit 17 this is compared to the previous number of 14 as the nation moved slowly out of the pandemic.

Swiss watch exports (Y/Y) for March hit 37.2% (prev -0.3%) as the sector recovers from the pandemic.

Tokyo's Governor has asked the Japanese government to declare a state of emergency in the city. This comes after another rise in COVID 19 infections. Elsewhere in the Asian region, India's Coronavirus daily new cases surpassed 300k. India is really struggling to get to grips with the pandemic at the moment.

Joe Biden says 80% of Americans over the age of 65 will have had 1 shot of the vaccine by Thursday.

Italian PM Draghi is to unveil a €221bln programme to rebuild the Italian economy.

There was a magnitude 5.7 earthquake offshore Chile. It is not clear if any mining operations have been affected yet.

Looking ahead to the rest of the session highlight include the US Presidents Earth Day summit, ECB rate decision, U.S. initial jobless claims, existing home sales and comments from German Buba Vice President Buch and ECB's Lagarde.
 

By Rajan Dhall

For Kitco News

Kinesis Money the cheapest place to buy/sell Gold and Silver with Free secure storage

David

Gold pushes higher ahead of the European market open

Gold pushes higher ahead of the European market open

Gold and silver are once again trading higher leading into the European open. Gold is 0.40% higher at $1785/oz while silver has moved up 1% to reach $26oz again.

After inheriting a negative close from the U.S., bourses in the Asia Pac area have struggled overnight. The Nikkei 225 fell -2.03%, ASX -0.29% and the Shanghai Composite traded flat.

In the FX markets, the majors traded within their ranges. The dollar index is 0.02% in the black and the biggest mover was AUD/USD which dropped 0.11%. In the rest of the commodities complex, copper is up another 0.50% and spot WTI fell 0.23%.

In regards to news, UK CPI for March came in at +0.7% vs +0.8% y/y expected and PPI Input month on month for the same month rose to 1.3% vs 0.6% expected.

Sticking with data, Australia Retail Sales for March beat expectations to hit +1.4% m/m (expected +1.0%).

The Japanese government are set to declare a state of emergency in Tokyo, Osaka, Hyogo due to another rise in COVID-19 cases.

Johnson & Johnson will restart shipments of its vaccine to the European Union after some production issues where resolved.

Chinese President Xi will attend the climate summit on 22nd April after Joe Biden extended an invitation to the Chinese leader.

In Germany, support for the Green party surged according to a recent poll by Forsa. Greens 28% vs Merkel's CDU 21%.

Ukrainian President Zelenskiy is said to be willing to meet Russian President Putin to ease tensions. Putin is also set to give his annual address to the nation today.

Saudi Arabia have reiterated calls for Iran to engage once again in negotiations and avoid any more escalation to not expose the region to more conflict.

Looking ahead to the rest of the session highlights include Canadian CPI, Canadian rate decision, weekly DoE's and comments from the BOC and BoE's Bailey.
 

By Rajan Dhall

For Kitco News

Kinesis Money the cheapest place to buy/sell Gold and Silver with Free secure storage

 

David

Gold and silver are mixed leading into the European open

Gold and silver are mixed leading into the European open

Gold is trading marginally lower heading into the European open and this comes after a 0.32% fall in yesterday's session. Silver performing slightly better trading 0.30% higher but this also comes after a drop on Monday's session.

After inheriting a negative close from Wall Street bourses in the Asia Pac area are pretty mixed. The ASX (-0.68%) and Nikkei 225 (-1.97%) took a tumble but India's Nifty (0.25%) and South Korea's Kospi (0.68%) both performed well while the Shanghai Composite traded flat.

In the FX markets, the dollar index fell 0.11% and the biggest mover was AUD/USD which rose 0.67%. In the rest of the commodities complex, copper moved another 1% higher and spot WTI also moved 0.86% in the same direction.

In terms of news stories, UK March jobless claims change came in at 10.1k vs 86.6k prior. The unemployment rate (Feb) also fell to 4.9% vs the analyst consensus of 5.1%. There was also German PPI data this morning and it continued to rise to reach 0.9% m/m for Match (exp 0.6% prior 0.7%).

Following the Fed's rhetoric, the RBA April monetary policy meeting minutes noted that unemployment too high. The RBA also said they would "reasonably" do what they can to support the Australian economy.

The PBOC sets China's 1-year loan prime rate at 3.85%, 5-year at 4.65%. Both are unchanged and this was expected.

Sticking with China, Premier Li also warn other countries against meddling in other nations affairs.

There was UK media report that "Russia 'planning large-scale warship assault on Ukraine water supplies'". US expresses deep concerns re Russia's plans to block parts of the Black Sea, seems the situation is escalating pretty quickly.

White House issues a statement saying infrastructure talks were fruitful. This comes after some reports yesterday that the U.S. administration where set to talk about how to section off parts of the bill.

In Australia, Rio Tino said their iron ore shipments increased but they also noted that production moved slightly lower. Brazil's Vale reported iron ore output of 68.0 tons vs expectations of 72 tons.

Looking ahead to the rest of the session highlights include NZ CPI and GDT. We could also hear from German Buba Vice President Buch and ECB's de Cos.
 

By Rajan Dhall

For Kitco News

 

Kinesis Money the cheapest place to buy/sell Gold and Silver with Free secure storage

 

David

Is gold price prepping for a major move higher this week?

Is gold price prepping for a major move higher this week?

Gold could be on the brink of another rally as it tops key resistance levels and moves towards $1,800 an ounce, according to analysts.

The precious metal is wrapping up its second consecutive week of gains after a positive start to Q2 amid a weaker U.S. dollar and retreating U.S. 10-year Treasury yields. At the time of writing, June Comex gold futures were trading at $1,779.90, up 2% on the week.

"The move in gold has been predominately driven by the U.S. dollar, which is continuing to drop. The dollar index is at 91.5 right now. Very important to note, we've seen a pretty significant decline from the 10-year yield and along the curve broadly. All of that has driven gold to the upside," TD Securities head of global strategy Bart Melek told Kitco News.

The momentum is definitely on gold's side right now, RJO Futures senior commodities broker Daniel Pavilonis told Kitco News.

"If we can close above $1,815 next week, we have a good shot at a very momentous move again to the highs. Possibly continue gold's secular bull market," Pavilonis said. "Markets have calmed down a bit. We had so much pressure from the Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank trying to ease tensions in the yields, and it worked. And what they have been doing behind the scenes is also working, giving metals some reprieve."

The weaker U.S. dollar has finally allowed gold to step out of its tight trading range, said FXTM market analyst Han Tan. "The greenback's support has been eroded with 10-year Treasury yields moving below the psychologically important 1.60% mark, which in turn has allowed spot gold to break above its 50-day simple moving average for the first time since early February," Tan said.

Next weeks also marks the Federal Reserve media blackout period ahead of its monetary policy announcement on April 28. ING said that no additional Fed speakers could mean a weaker U.S. dollar, which is beneficial for gold. "A quieter week for U.S. data and the Fed in blackout period could favor a continuation of benign market trends and a slightly weaker USD," the ING strategists wrote.

There is no significant resistance for gold until the $1,800, said LaSalle Futures Group senior market strategist Charlie Nedoss. "The $1,809.40 is the 100-day moving average, and over time we will hit it."

It was key that the precious metal didn't close below $1,736.40 — this week's lows, Nedoss added. "A lot of this has been data-driven," he said.

The market is also recalibrating after pricing in too much inflation too soon, Melek explained.

"Inflation expectations have been a bit too rich, and they have been going down. It suggests that the market recalibrated its view. We've seen too much of an increase along the yield curve in its expectation of higher inflation, and now we are paring it back. Also, global economic concerns are playing a role as some countries who don't have a robust vaccine deployment plan could have a negative impact on the global recovery," he said.

In the meantime, the algorithmic community has been short on gold, but traders need to watch the $1,808 level for a change in that trend, Melek noted. "Prices just north of $1,800 would catalyze the covering of a significant portion of current CTA short positions."

However, it is too early to get too excited when it comes to gold's future price action, Melek warned. "We passed the 50-day moving average, the next level here is around north of $1,800."

Before moving much higher, there needs to be a confirmation that the rise in the U.S. 10-year Treasury yields is contained.

"The big battle here will be between the Fed and the market. The Fed is saying that any inflation will likely be transitory due to base effects, while the market might start to worry that they are behind the curve. We are still waiting for the Fed statement to tell us that they will stay put," Melek stated.

 

Data to watch

The European Central Bank (ECB) and the Bank of Canada (BoC) interest rate announcements are on the radar next week. They come just one week ahead of the Federal Reserve's April 27-28 monetary policy meeting.

"The ECB will look through any temporary increases in headline inflation and will not tolerate significant moves in bond yields unless they are the result of improved growth prospects. The bank's decision to front-load asset purchases at the last meeting was meant to cap the rise in yields, which have tracked moves in U.S. Treasuries," ING strategists said.

Markets will also be eyeing the latest U.S. jobless claims data and existing home sales, both due out on Thursday, as well as Friday's U.S. manufacturing PMI and new home sales.

Since the macro data will be quieter than usual next week, analysts are also carefully monitoring the progress of U.S. President Joe Biden's infrastructure plan.

"There is little sign of bi-partisanship on the $2tn package, and it seems that the Democrats are going to push it through the reconciliation process to avoid the need for 60 Senators to agree to put it to a vote. Nonetheless, not all Democrats are fully on board, meaning we could yet see changes to the package, especially surrounding the taxation part," said ING chief international economist James Knightley.

 

By Anna Golubova

For Kitco News

Kinesis Money the cheapest place to buy/sell Gold and Silver with Free secure storage

David

Gold and silver prices spike, but can rally last? Jim Wyckoff on the long-awaited bull market

Gold and silver prices spike, but can rally last? Jim Wyckoff on the long-awaited bull market

Momentum has shifted back in gold and silver’s favor for now, said Jim Wyckoff, senior market analyst at Kitco News.

“When we last talked, the markets, both gold and silver, were in a near-term price downtrend. Remember, we talked about key support levels that had to hold to keep prices from accelerating to the downside and those key price support levels, technical levels, did indeed hold,” Wyckoff told David Lin, anchor for Kitco News.

On silver, Wyckoff said that the silver market has simply been following gold’s price.

Wyckoff added that this rebound is likely to continue in the short-term.

“The charts suggest that they will [continue moving upward] on a near-term basis. Right now, with the upside breakouts we’ve seen on the daily charts, now the price action we’ve seen in silver, the path of least resistance is sideways to higher,” he said.

 

By David Lin

For Kitco News

 

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