Silver price forecast: XAG/USD jumps 4% as oil slump revives bulls

Silver price forecast: XAG/USD jumps 4% as oil slump revives bulls
Devesh Kumar
15 Jun 2026, 06:37 AM

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Buy Silver (XAG/USD)

Buy XAG/USD. The news flips the macro tape: oil down (~5%) + dollar pullback makes non-yielding assets cheaper and reduces “sticky inflation” fears, so silver’s rate sensitivity should keep working. Catalyst is the Fed tone: if Warsh doesn’t re-ignite inflation risk, silver can extend beyond the $71.70 20-day EMA toward $78.83 and $80.

Key Risk: Fed signals inflation is still sticky despite lower oil, pushing real yields up and crushing silver’s rebound.

Sell US Dollar (DXY)

Sell the US Dollar via a DXY short. Silver’s jump is explicitly tied to dollar weakness; if the market keeps pricing less energy-driven inflation pressure, the dollar should stay soft, reinforcing silver and gold. This is the cleanest driver behind the move, not the headline itself.

Key Risk: Fed turns hawkish on inflation anyway, causing a dollar snapback that drags silver lower.

  • Silver surged as easing oil fears boosted precious metals demand.
  • Falling crude revived hopes for a less hawkish Federal Reserve.
  • A weaker dollar added momentum to silver’s rebound in Asia.

Silver rallied sharply on Monday as investors moved back into precious metals after a tentative US-Iran peace framework eased fears of a prolonged energy shock.

Spot silver rose 4% to about $70.80 an ounce in Asian trade, extending a rebound that had built as oil prices fell and the dollar weakened.

The move came after Washington and Tehran signalled support for an agreement to end hostilities and reopen the Strait of Hormuz, the waterway that had become the main pressure point for global energy markets.

For silver, the relief was not just geopolitical.

The metal had been under pressure during the conflict because higher crude prices threatened to keep inflation sticky and delay any shift by central banks towards easier policy.

A drop of almost 5% in WTI crude helped reverse that trade, making non-yielding assets more attractive again.

Oil retreat changes the rate story

The Strait of Hormuz matters because a large share of global oil and liquefied natural gas moves through the route.

Any disruption there quickly feeds into fuel costs, shipping risks and inflation expectations.

That is why silver responded positively to falling crude, even though precious metals are usually bought during periods of geopolitical stress.

The market focus shifted from war risk to the possibility that lower energy prices could reduce pressure on the Federal Reserve to sound more hawkish.

The dollar’s pullback added another support. A softer US currency makes dollar-priced commodities cheaper for buyers using other currencies, helping to lift both gold and silver.

Fed decision becomes the next test

The rally now faces a central-bank test.

The Federal Reserve is expected to leave interest rates unchanged this week, but traders will be watching the tone of Chair Kevin Warsh’s first policy meeting closely.

If policymakers acknowledge lower energy pressure, silver could hold its rebound.

A warning that inflation risks remain elevated would make the rally harder to sustain, particularly after such a strong intraday move.

Silver’s dual role as a precious and industrial metal also matters.

Demand tied to solar panels, electronics and broader electrification has kept the long-term story constructive, but short-term trading is still being driven by rates, the dollar and oil.

Technical levels stay in focus

From a chart perspective, silver remains below the 20-day exponential moving average near $71.70, leaving the immediate recovery incomplete.

A daily close above that level would strengthen the case for a move towards $78.83 and then the $80 mark.

Failure to reclaim that area would keep the market vulnerable to profit-taking, with the March low near $61.01 still the key downside reference.