Gold, Silver, and Geopolitical Risk

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Why Gold and Silver Still Look Attractive Here

Lately, I have been spending a lot of time thinking about how much noise investors are being asked to sort through. War headlines, oil prices, interest rates, political opinions, market predictions — it can all come at people fast. When that happens, I think it helps to slow down, step back, and focus on what is actually happening rather than just reacting to the loudest voices.

One of the most important things to understand right now is that the recent rise in gold and silver was not simply caused by the latest geopolitical events. A lot of that risk was already baked into the market. In other words, investors had already been expecting serious tension, so when events unfolded, metals did not need to make a dramatic new move just because the news became official.

That matters because in the past, when we have seen this kind of geopolitical conflict or war, metals have often moved sharply higher in response. This time, many people expected the same kind of immediate dramatic move and have been surprised not to see it. The reason is that much of that concern had already been priced in ahead of time. That is an important point, because it answers one of the questions we are hearing most often right now.

Markets often move ahead of the headlines, not after them.

Another word you may hear right now is consolidation. That sounds technical, but the idea is simple. Consolidation means prices are pausing and moving in a range after a strong move higher. It is the market catching its breath and digesting gains. It does not automatically mean the trend is over. In many cases, it is simply part of how markets behave after a strong run.

There has also been discussion about the possibility of gold briefly moving toward $4,850. Whether a market touches a level like that or shifts away from it quickly, the larger lesson is the same: short-term targets can come and go fast, especially when markets are reacting to uncertainty, emotion, and rapidly changing events.

You may also hear the term triple bottom. In plain English, that means the market has tested a similar low area three different times and held there. Many traders see that as a sign that buyers are stepping in and that support may be forming. It is not a guarantee, but it can be a useful signal.

I also think it is helpful to talk about the relationship between gold and petroleum. Yes, there is a connection. Higher oil prices can add inflation pressure, create more uncertainty in the broader economy, and weaken confidence in stocks and bonds. That can be supportive for gold. But that does not mean gold and oil move together every day or every week. The relationship is real, but it is not exact.

The same goes for interest rates. A lot of people assume gold cannot do well when real interest rates are positive. The research suggests the relationship is much weaker than many people think. The correlation between quarterly gold prices and real Treasury bill rates is weak, and the correlation with nominal Treasury bill rates is even weaker. In simple terms, rates matter, but they do not control gold by themselves.

So what is the takeaway?

In my view, at these levels, gold and silver are very attractive for both long-term and short-term investors. That does not mean markets will move in a straight line. They rarely do. It does mean that geopolitical tension, economic uncertainty, and broader financial concerns continue to create a strong case for owning precious metals.

My goal is never to add to the noise. I would rather offer a calmer, more fact-based way to think through what is happening so people can make decisions with greater confidence and clarity.

As always, my encouragement is simple: stay calm, stay informed, and make decisions based on understanding, not noise.



Source: cmi-gold-silver.com

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