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Silver bounce from $56.60 fails to shake off Fed’s higher-rate threat

Silver bounce from $56.60 fails to shake off Fed’s higher-rate threat
Devesh Kumar
30 June 2026, 15:36 PM

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Buy USD/JPY

Buy USD/JPY as a direct expression of the “higher-for-longer” USD strength channel. The article highlights that higher rates strengthen the dollar and make cash/bonds more attractive, which typically pressures silver. If the Fed stays hawkish and labor data supports tighter policy, USD should keep firm. Thesis killer: Labor data is weak enough to trigger a clear risk-off-to-dovish repricing that sends USD lower (USD/JPY breaks down materially).

Key Risk: Labor data forces a dovish repricing and USD/JPY breaks down.

Sell XAG/USD

Sell XAG/USD (spot or CFD) into rallies. The article says the bounce is only a pause because the Fed’s higher-rate threat is still the main driver for non-yielding silver, and XAG/USD remains well below the 20-day EMA (~$64.57). Keep pressure on until it reclaims ~$61.01 and then the 20-day average, which would signal the downtrend is easing. Thesis killer: US rate expectations flip dovish—Fed pricing collapses (or labor data is clearly soft), pushing silver back above ~$61 and toward/through the 20-day EMA.

Key Risk: Fed turns dovish fast, collapsing rate-hike odds and lifting silver above ~$61/$64.57.

  • Silver rebounds from $56.60 but Fed hike bets keep bulls under pressure.
  • JOLTS and payrolls data may decide whether XAG/USD can hold near $57.
  • Technical signals show silver near oversold, with $54.86 level in focus.

Silver’s bounce on Tuesday looked more like a pause in the selloff than the start of a convincing turn.

The metal found buyers near $56.60 in Asia, but the broader mood stayed cautious as traders leaned into the idea that the Federal Reserve’s next move may still be a rate increase.

For a market that offers no yield, that is a difficult backdrop to fight.

Fed risk keeps silver under pressure

Spot silver was trading near $57.40, still down about 1.5% on the day, after recovering from its Asian-session low.

The rebound helped slow the slide, but it did little to change the near-term picture.

Fed funds futures suggest traders see a strong chance of at least one US rate hike this year.

That has become the main drag on precious metals, with investors reassessing whether inflation is sticky enough to force the Fed into another tightening cycle.

Higher rates tend to hurt silver in the same way they hurt gold.

They lift the appeal of cash and bonds, strengthen the dollar, and make non-yielding assets harder to justify.

Silver’s industrial demand story is still intact, but in the short run, rate pricing is setting the tone.

Labour data becomes the next test

The next cue will come from the US labour market.

The JOLTS job openings report for May is due at 14:00 GMT, with forecasts pointing to a decline to about 7.3 million from 7.618 million in April.

A stronger reading would support the view that the economy can absorb tighter policy. A softer number could give silver some breathing room.

The bigger event comes on Thursday, when the June nonfarm payrolls report is released ahead of the US holiday weekend.

Traders will be watching not just the headline jobs number, but also wages and unemployment.

Any sign that labour demand remains firm may keep pressure on silver by reinforcing the hawkish Fed trade.

Fed Chair Kevin Warsh has also made the market more data-sensitive by stepping away from the kind of forward guidance investors had grown used to.

That means each major release now carries more weight.

Technical picture still looks fragile

The technical picture remains complicated despite the intraday recovery.

XAG/USD is trading well below its 20-day exponential moving average near $64.57, keeping the short-term bias tilted to the downside.

The relative strength index, near 30, shows selling pressure is stretched but not yet clearly exhausted.

On the upside, silver needs to reclaim $61.01 before bulls can argue that the rebound has legs.

A move above the 20-day average would be a stronger signal that the downtrend is easing.

For now, support around $54.86 is the level to watch. A clean break below that zone could open the door to a deeper slide towards $50.

Until then, silver is stuck between bargain-hunting and a Fed story that still favours caution.