Gold and Silver Bounce Off Their Lows as the Dollar Eases
Key facts
- Gold climbed back toward $4,200 an ounce on Monday, June 22, bouncing off last week’s lows.
- Silver gained about 2% to around $66.60, the stronger of the two on the day.
- The recovery followed a slide that took gold to about $4,150, its weakest since mid-June.
- A weekend US-Iran summit and a slightly softer dollar helped ease the pressure.
- The bounce looks like relief after a sharp fall rather than a decisive turn, with the rate backdrop still firm.
Today’s focus
After weeks of grinding lower, gold and silver finally caught a break. Both bounced on Monday, recovering some of the ground lost in a punishing stretch that had dragged gold to its weakest in nearly two weeks. A weekend summit between the United States and Iran and a small step back in the dollar gave the metals room to breathe. But this is relief, not rescue: the interest-rate wall that has held them down for weeks is still standing, and one good day does not undo it.
Gold climbed back toward $4,200 an ounce on Monday and silver gained about 2% to around $66.60, both bouncing off the lows they reached late last week after a brutal slide that had taken gold to roughly $4,150, its weakest since mid-June. The recovery was helped by a weekend summit between the United States and Iran, which eased some oil and geopolitical worries, and by a slight pullback in the US dollar from the one-year high it had reached. But the move looks more like relief after a sharp fall than a genuine turn, with the Federal Reserve’s harder line on interest rates, the force that has driven the metals down for weeks, still firmly in place.

01 The session in one read
Gold and silver steadied and bounced on Monday after a bruising run. Gold recovered toward $4,200 an ounce, clawing back part of last week’s slide, while silver did better still, rising about 2% to around $66.60. It was a welcome change of direction for two markets that had spent weeks grinding lower under a relentless rate-and-dollar headwind.
The bounce came as a couple of pressures eased at once. A weekend diplomatic summit calmed some of the geopolitical and oil worries that had been swirling, and the dollar stepped back slightly from its recent peak. With those weights lifted a little, the metals found room to recover, though the gains were modest against the scale of the preceding decline.
Our read: Relief, not rescue. A bounce off the lows is welcome, but it follows weeks of selling and comes with the rate backdrop still firm. This looks like a pause in the downtrend rather than the start of a new climb. Confidence: medium
02 The day’s levels
| Metal | Approx. level | Move |
|---|---|---|
| Gold (per ounce) | $4,200 | +0.7% |
| Silver (per ounce) | $66.60 | +2.0% |
Silver outpaced gold on the way up, just as it had on the way down. The smaller, more volatile of the two metals tends to amplify moves in both directions, so a recovery day naturally sees it climb faster. Both, though, are bouncing from levels well below where they traded earlier in the year, a reminder of how far the rate-driven correction has carried them.
Live Market IntelligenceCommodities — Live Market Board
Rio Times · Live Market Intelligence
Commodities — Live Market Board
-0.75%
| Instrument | Last | Change | YoY | Prev. | High | Low | Volume |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| GOLD | 4,227 | +0.06% | +25.13% | 4,224 | 4,238 | 4,139 | 119,143 |
| SILVER | 66.50 | +0.37% | +83.94% | 66.25 | 67.23 | 63.36 | 34,144 |
| BRENT | 79.25 | -0.75% | +10.87% | 79.85 | 82.38 | 78.62 | 23,009 |
| WTI | 75.37 | -1.61% | +10.01% | 76.60 | 78.14 | 74.90 | 141,957 |
| COPPER | 6.38 | +0.11% | +31.77% | 6.37 | 6.40 | 6.27 | 32,700 |
| LITHIUM | 82.15 | -1.11% | +126.68% | 83.07 | 82.82 | 81.93 | 272,620 |
| IRON ORE | 161.91 | — | +70.88% | 161.91 | 161.91 | 1 | |
| SOY | 1,144 | +1.87% | +8.03% | 1,123 | 1,150 | 1,143 | 18,611 |
| CORN | 414.75 | -0.66% | -1.07% | 417.50 | 418.00 | 414.00 | 19,121 |
| WHEAT | 608.75 | +0.50% | +10.13% | 605.75 | 620.50 | 604.50 | 11,933 |
| COFFEE | 261.95 | -4.78% | -20.69% | 275.10 | 256.00 | 251.65 | 3,733 |
| SUGAR | 14.08 | +3.61% | -12.22% | 13.59 | 14.23 | 14.08 | 18,482 |
| COCOA | 4,396 | +6.11% | -52.16% | 4,143 | 4,579 | 4,409 | 5,750 |
| ORANGE JUICE | 158.20 | +6.28% | -32.39% | 148.85 | 158.85 | 147.05 | — |
| COTTON | 80.12 | +5.35% | +25.27% | 76.05 | 78.45 | 77.55 | 10,928 |
| BEEF | 246.75 | -3.51% | +11.00% | 255.73 | 248.88 | 245.78 | 20,349 |
| CATTLE | 366.93 | -0.14% | +21.18% | 367.42 | 369.03 | 365.20 | 6,593 |
| USD/BRL | 5.14 | -0.20% | -6.83% | 5.15 | 5.15 | 5.14 | — |
03 Why it moved — a softer dollar lets the metals breathe
The bounce traces to a modest easing of the two forces that had been crushing the metals. First, the US dollar slipped back slightly from the one-year high it had reached after the Federal Reserve‘s harder line on interest rates. Even a small step down in the dollar reduces the pressure on gold and silver, which are priced in dollars and pay no yield of their own, so they compete directly against a strong currency and high bond returns.
Second, a weekend summit between the United States and Iran revived hopes of calmer relations and lower oil prices. Lower oil eases the inflation worry that has been feeding the case for higher interest rates, which in turn is what has been hurting the metals. Neither shift was dramatic, but together they were enough to let gold and silver recover some ground after weeks of one-way selling.

04 Why this is relief, not a turn
For all the bounce, the bigger picture has not changed. The dominant force weighing on gold and silver remains the prospect of higher-for-longer US interest rates, and that has not gone away. Gold was still on track for a third straight weekly decline even after Monday’s gain, a sign that the recovery has not yet broken the downtrend. One major bank trimmed its year-end gold forecast just last week, underlining the caution.
The lesson of recent weeks is that the metals are being driven by the rate dial, not by fear. They fell through a war and an oil spike; they barely lifted when peace talks faltered. So a bounce on the day a summit eases tensions and the dollar softens fits the same pattern: the metals move with rates and the dollar above all else. Until that picture shifts decisively, rallies are likely to be relief bounces within a broader correction.
05 The cross-asset board
Monday’s bounce was shared across the assets that pay no yield. Alongside gold and silver, Bitcoin steadied, the whole group catching a breath together as the dollar eased. That shared move is the clearest sign that a single force, the dollar and the rate outlook behind it, has been driving all of them, rather than anything specific to metals or crypto.
The contrast with stocks remains instructive. Equities had already rebounded after the Federal Reserve’s decision, looking past the rate worry to cheaper oil and the prospect of cooler inflation ahead. The metals, with no earnings to lean on, had to wait for the dollar itself to ease before they could recover. That difference in what each asset responds to has defined the whole episode.
06 The technical picture
Both metals are bouncing from the lower end of their recent ranges. Gold’s recovery toward $4,200 lifts it off the roughly $4,150 level that marked its weakest point in nearly two weeks, while silver’s stronger rebound carries it back toward the middle of its band. The longer-term trend lines that guided both higher through the year remain overhead, now acting as resistance rather than support.
The levels to watch are those recent lows and the overhead resistance. Holding above last week’s floor would suggest a base is forming, while a failure to push higher would point to more consolidation. A decisive recovery would likely need the dollar to keep easing or the Federal Reserve to soften its tone; until then, the bounce sits within a broader downtrend.
07 What to watch
- The dollar. The master switch. Whether it keeps easing from its one-year high or strengthens again will largely decide the metals’ next move.
- US interest rates. Any further signal from the Federal Reserve about higher rates ahead would cap the bounce; a softer tone would help it extend.
- The US-Iran talks. A durable deal that lowers oil and inflation would ease rate pressure, an indirect tailwind for the metals.
- Central-bank buying. Steady gold purchases by central banks remain a key long-term floor under the price even when short-term traders sell.
Frequently Asked Questions
Did gold and silver go up or down on June 22, 2026?
Both rose. Gold climbed back toward $4,200 an ounce and silver gained about 2% to around $66.60, bouncing off the lows they hit late last week. The recovery followed a brutal stretch in which gold had fallen to about $4,150, its weakest since mid-June, on track for a third straight weekly decline.
Why are gold and silver bouncing now?
Two things helped. A weekend summit between the United States and Iran eased some geopolitical and oil worries, and the US dollar slipped back a little from the one-year high it had reached. With the dollar a touch softer, the pressure on these yield-free metals eased just enough to let them recover some ground.
Is this the bottom for gold and silver?
It is too early to say. The bounce looks more like relief after a sharp fall than a genuine turn. The bigger force, the US Federal Reserve’s signal that interest rates could rise, is still in place, and gold was on track for a third straight weekly loss. A real recovery would likely need the rate picture or the dollar to shift more decisively.
Why did gold fall so far in the first place?
The main driver has been interest rates, not war or inflation. The Federal Reserve’s harder line pushed the dollar to a one-year high and kept bond yields elevated, which makes safe, interest-paying assets more attractive than gold and silver, which pay no yield. That rate pressure has outweighed every other factor for weeks.
What should investors watch next?
The dollar and US interest rates remain the master switch. A softer Fed or a weaker dollar would give the metals room to recover, while any renewed strength would cap the bounce. Steady central-bank gold buying and silver’s industrial demand are the longer-term supports that could reassert themselves once the rate pressure eases.
Connected Coverage
Monday’s bounce followed a punishing stretch in which gold fell to about $4,150, its weakest since mid-June, on track for a third straight weekly decline as a one-year-high dollar and the threat of higher rates weighed. The recovery came as a weekend US-Iran summit eased tensions and the dollar slipped back slightly, letting gold, silver and Bitcoin all steady together. The episode has underlined that the metals are being driven by the rate outlook and the dollar rather than by the war-and-inflation headlines that would once have moved them.
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