Silver rate crosses $70/ounce for the first time

Silver rose ‍past $70 for the first time on Tuesday, while gold hit a record high, trading just below $4,500 an ounce, as a weaker US dollar and persistent geopolitical uncertainty lifted demand for safe-haven assets.

“Silver is responding ⁠to many of the same macroeconomic forces ⁠but with added intensity due to its own supply-demand dynamics,” said Ahmad Assiri, research ‍strategist ‌at Pepperstone. “Tight supply ⁠conditions, combined with strong investment and speculative interest, are magnifying price moves as silver approaches the $70 level.”

Spot gold rate climbed 0.9% to $4,486.99/ounce, after scaling an all-time high of $4,497.55 ​earlier in the session. Bullion has gained more than 70% this year as investors seek refuge amid global tensions and lower interest rates.

US gold futures for February delivery added 1.1% to $4,518.80.

The US dollar extended losses to a second day and is on track for its biggest ⁠annual fall since 2017, according to Refinitiv data.

Last ‌week, US President Donald Trump ordered a “blockade” of all sanctioned oil tankers entering and leaving Venezuela. He also said he was not ruling out the possibility of war with ​the South American country.

Markets are currently pricing in two interest rate cuts for 2026 as reports of President Trump’s plans to name a new Federal ‍Reserve chair early next year ‍reinforce expectations ⁠for dovish monetary policy.

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