Invezz

Silver prices sink below $60 as the rebound runs into fresh resistance

Silver prices sink below $60 as the rebound runs into fresh resistance
Devesh Kumar
13 July 2026, 16:46 PM

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Invezz
Buy Gold (GLD) vs Silver

Go long GLD and short SLV/AG (relative value). The piece explicitly contrasts them: gold is benefiting more from haven behavior, while silver is struggling because it’s both haven and industrial. If geopolitical stress continues, gold should outperform as investors rotate into the cleaner defensive trade while silver remains capped by higher yields and dollar strength.

Key Risk: Gold stops outperforming—either because real yields/dollar fall sharply (helping silver catch up) or because industrial-demand fears fade and silver rallies on growth optimism.

Sell Silver (SLV/AG)

Short SLV (or AG) while spot silver is below $60 and $60 acts as resistance. The article’s driver is a “dollar up + yields up” regime that keeps pressuring rate-sensitive metals, and silver is being treated more like a cyclical industrial asset than a pure haven. Technicals are fragile: rebounds are likely to be sold until silver reclaims $60, with $58–$58.50 as the near support and $55.60 as the next downside magnet if that breaks.

Key Risk: The dollar weakens and yields fall fast enough to push silver back above $60 and hold it, flipping the chart and sentiment.

  • Silver falls near $59 as dollar strength overwhelms haven demand.
  • India shortages and tech demand offer silver a separate support.
  • XAG/USD stays fragile below $60 as sellers keep control of the chart.

Silver prices fell near $59 an ounce on Monday as renewed US-Iran strikes pushed traders back towards the dollar and out of rate-sensitive precious metals.

The move was part of a wider pullback across the metals complex, but silver’s selloff carried its own pressure points.

Unlike gold, silver is not only a haven asset. It is also an industrial metal tied to solar, electronics and manufacturing demand.

That makes the current setup awkward: geopolitical stress is lifting defensive demand in theory, while higher yields and a firmer dollar are hurting the trade in practice.

Dollar strength outweighs haven demand

Spot silver dropped as much as 2.9% to around $58.14 an ounce, extending a volatile run after last week’s rebound.

The immediate pressure came from the wider market reaction to Gulf tensions, with oil rising sharply, Treasury yields moving higher and the dollar gaining ground.

That combination is difficult for silver. A stronger dollar makes the metal more expensive for buyers using other currencies, while higher yields reduce the appeal of assets that do not pay income.

The result is that silver has struggled to benefit from the safe-haven impulse usually linked to geopolitical shocks.

The market is also treating silver more like a cyclical asset than a pure defensive holding.

That makes it vulnerable when investors worry that higher energy costs could squeeze growth later.

Physical demand offers a different cushion

Silver’s longer-term story is not only about rates. Industrial demand remains an important support, especially from solar panels, electrification, electronics and AI-linked infrastructure.

The Silver Institute has said demand from key technology sectors is expected to expand over the next five years as silver’s electrical and thermal conductivity remain difficult to replace.

Physical-market tightness is also visible in India, the world’s biggest silver market.

Import restrictions have created shortages and pushed local premiums to their highest level in six months, even though demand has been softer than usual.

That shows the silver market still has supply frictions that can support prices when investor selling cools.

This does not prevent short-term weakness. But it does mean silver’s downside is not driven by investment flows alone.

Physical availability and industrial consumption remain important parts of the price floor.

Technicals keep $60 in focus

The chart still looks fragile. Silver is trading below the $60 psychological level, turning that area into the first hurdle for buyers.

A sustained move back above $60 would improve sentiment and could open the way towards $61.50 and then $63.

Until that happens, rebounds may attract selling. The $58-$58.50 area is the first support zone.

A clean break below it would expose the recent low near $55.60 and confirm that the latest recovery attempt has failed.

For now, silver needs more than geopolitical anxiety to recover. It needs the dollar to soften, yields to cool or physical demand to overpower investor selling.