The metal’s recent surge has also been supported by rising expectations the US Federal Reserve will lower interest rates at its meeting next week
[NEW YORK] Silver touched a fresh record high and capped its second weekly gain as strong inflows to exchange-traded funds (ETFs) added more impetus to a scorching rally.
The white metal rose as much as 3.9 per cent on Friday (Dec 5) to an all-time high of US$59.33 an ounce. Total additions to silver-backed ETFs in the four days to Thursday are already the highest for any full week since July, a strong indicator of investor appetite despite signs silver’s gains may be overdone.
“These flows can quickly amplify price moves and trigger short-term short squeezes,” said Dilin Wu, research strategist at Pepperstone Group. For much of this week, the metal’s 14-day relative strength index has whipsawed either side of 70 – a threshold above which traders are likely to deem the metal as overbought.
Silver prices have roughly doubled this year, outpacing a 60 per cent rise in gold. The rally accelerated in the last two months, in part thanks to a historic squeeze in London. While that crunch has eased in recent weeks as more metal was shipped to the world’s biggest silver trading hub, other markets are now seeing supply constraints. Chinese inventories are near their lowest in a decade.
“Silver’s outsized rally signals it’s no longer gold’s quiet sidecar,” said Hebe Chen, an analyst at Vantage Markets in Melbourne. “The market is waking up to structural scarcity and fast-rising industrial demand, not just the haven story.”
The metal’s recent surge has also been supported by rising expectations the US Federal Reserve will lower interest rates at its meeting next week. Swap contracts indicate a near-certainty the Fed will reduce the cost of borrowing – typically a positive for non-yielding precious metals. These bets withstood the latest US data, which showed the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge in September rose in line with economists’ expectations.
Silver could rise to US$62 an ounce in the coming three months “on the back of Fed cuts, robust investment demand, and physical deficit”, Citigroup analysts including Max Layton wrote in a note.
Not just valued as an investment asset, silver also has many useful real-world properties that make it a component in a range of products, such as circuit boards, solar panels and coatings for medical devices. Global demand for the metal has outpaced output from mines for five consecutive years.
Silver rose 2.1 per cent to US$58.35 an ounce as at 4.22 pm in New York. It’s up more than 3.3 per cent for the week, following last week’s 13 per cent surge. Gold slipped 0.3 per cent to US$4,195.47 an ounce, while platinum and palladium also rose. The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index inched 0.2 per cent lower. BLOOMBERG
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