Precious Metals Slide Broadly in Asian Trade as Dollar Weakness Fails to Provide Lift

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Silver, platinum, and palladium led declines across the metals complex in midday Asian trading, a notable move given that a softer U.S. dollar would typically support commodity prices.

Precious metals fell broadly in Asian midday trade, with silver on the Shanghai Futures Exchange (SHFE) joining platinum and palladium among the session’s worst performers. The selloff stands out because it came alongside a weaker U.S. dollar — a condition that usually makes dollar-denominated commodities cheaper for overseas buyers and tends to support prices rather than depress them.

When metals fall even as the dollar softens, it often signals that demand-side concerns or risk-off sentiment are dominating. Traders may be reducing exposure across the commodities complex for reasons beyond currency moves — whether that is uncertainty about industrial demand, profit-taking after recent runs, or broader caution in equity and commodity markets.

Platinum and palladium, both heavily tied to automotive catalyst demand, have faced persistent headwinds from the uncertain pace of global vehicle production and the longer-term shift toward battery-electric vehicles, which require far less palladium than traditional internal combustion engines. A session of outright declines in both metals reinforces the fragile near-term demand picture for the platinum group metals.

Silver’s drop on the SHFE is worth watching closely. Silver carries a dual identity — part monetary metal, part industrial input used in solar panels, electronics, and electric vehicles. When silver underperforms even gold in a risk-off move, it typically reflects concern about industrial demand rather than a flight away from precious metals as a whole. The gold-to-silver ratio, a widely tracked gauge of relative value, would be worth monitoring in the sessions ahead for any widening signal.

Broader base metals and industrial commodities were also under pressure in the session, with lithium carbonate dropping more than five percent and tin and stainless steel contracts among the decliners. That breadth suggests the selling pressure was not isolated to precious metals but reflected a wider pullback across the materials complex.

Watch whether the dollar’s direction and any fresh data on industrial activity help stabilize silver and the platinum group metals in the sessions ahead.

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