Gold and Silver Slide as Inflation Concerns Lift the Dollar

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Precious metals took a sharp hit in recent trading, with gold dropping $91 an ounce on Comex and silver falling $4, as stubborn inflation worries pushed the US dollar higher and weighed on the complex.

Gold and silver both logged steep losses in the latest session, dragged lower by a strengthening US dollar and renewed anxiety over the inflation outlook. Comex gold shed $91 an ounce while silver gave up $4, marking one of the more pronounced single-session pullbacks for the metals in recent weeks.

A firmer dollar is the classic headwind for precious metals. Because gold and silver are priced in dollars, a rising greenback makes them more expensive for buyers holding other currencies, which tends to suppress demand and push prices down. When inflation expectations shift in ways that suggest the Federal Reserve may keep interest rates elevated for longer, the dollar typically catches a bid — and that dynamic appeared to be at work here.

Rising real interest rates are the other piece of the puzzle. Higher rates increase the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding assets like gold, making Treasury bonds and money-market instruments comparatively more attractive. When markets sense that rate cuts are being pushed further out on the calendar, bullion often feels the pressure first.

Silver’s decline slightly outpaced gold’s on a percentage basis, which is not unusual during risk-off moves. Silver carries a larger industrial component in its demand profile than gold, meaning it can face dual pressure — weaker safe-haven buying and softer industrial demand expectations — when macro sentiment sours.

Despite the session’s losses, gold has been a strong performer over the longer run, supported by central bank buying, geopolitical uncertainty, and persistent concerns about fiscal deficits in major economies. Pullbacks of this size, while notable, have historically attracted fresh buying from institutional and retail investors who view dips as entry points rather than trend reversals. Whether that pattern holds will depend heavily on the next round of US economic data.

All eyes now turn to upcoming US inflation data and Fed commentary for signals on how long elevated rates — and dollar strength — might persist.

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