IBOV 176,395 ▲ 2.11% IPSA 10,989 ▼ 0.33% IPC MEX 66,588 ▲ 0.73% MERVAL 3,229,673 ▲ 0.85% COLCAP 2,294.61 ▲ 0.08% BVL PERÚ 56,194.27 ▲ 1.18% USD/BRL5.10▼ 0.29% USD/MXN17.48▼ 0.41% USD/CLP922.26▼ 0.59% USD/COP3,238▼ 3.15% USD/PEN3.39▼ 0.20% USD/ARS1,487▼ 0.03% USD/UYU40.22▲ 1.20% USD/PYG6,055▲ 1.53% USD/BOB10.14▲ 4.01% USD/DOP58.48▼ 0.12% USD/CRC448.82▲ 1.40% USD/GTQ7.63▲ 2.28% USD/HNL26.72▲ 1.50% USD/NIO36.62▲ 0.26% USD/VES707.92▼ 0.13% USD/PAB1.00— 0.00% USD/BZD2.00— 0.00% USD/JMD158.07▲ 0.80% USD/TTD6.75▲ 1.32% EUR/BRL5.84▼ 0.98% BRENT 75.75 ▼ 0.72% WTI 71.27 ▼ 1.12% IRON ORE 161.91 — — COPPER 6.29 ▲ 1.22% GOLD 4,120 ▼ 0.26% SILVER 60.31 ▼ 0.11% SOY 1,190 ▲ 0.83% CORN 458.50 ▲ 7.19% WHEAT 645.00 ▲ 5.52% COFFEE 332.35 ▼ 6.89% SUGAR 14.87 ▼ 1.65% ORANGE JUICE 149.90 — 0.00% COTTON 80.87 ▲ 6.18% COCOA 5,985 ▼ 5.14% BEEF 234.45 ▼ 0.34% CATTLE 354.45 ▼ 0.48% LITHIUM 72.50 ▼ 0.44% PETR4 39.42 ▲ 0.54% VALE3 74.25 ▲ 1.50% ITUB4 43.58 ▲ 2.32% BBDC4 18.54 ▲ 3.00% ABEV3 15.84 ▲ 0.76% BBAS3 20.36 ▲ 1.80% B3SA3 15.39 ▲ 4.06% WEGE3 46.44 ▲ 1.53% PRIO3 55.20 ▼ 0.74% SUZB3 41.50 ▲ 1.15% RENT3 40.45 ▲ 2.67% AZZA3 19.08 ▲ 3.36% CSAN3 4.02 ▲ 4.15% RAIZ4 0.36 ▼ 2.70% PCAR3 2.77 ▲ 0.36% GMAT3 3.97 ▲ 1.02% PSSA3 53.98 ▲ 1.18% CVCB3 1.26 ▲ 0.80% POSI3 3.95 ▲ 2.60% SLCE3 13.94 ▲ 1.09% NATU3 8.57 ▲ 1.30% BRKM5 6.52 ▲ 2.52% RANI3 7.97 ▲ 1.40% CSNA3 5.12 ▲ 6.67% CMIN3 5.06 ▲ 4.76% USIM5 8.44 ▲ 1.08% GGBR4 22.95 ▲ 2.09% ENEV3 26.95 ▲ 2.86% CPFE3 47.40 ▲ 2.40% CMIG4 11.30 ▲ 1.99% EQTL3 40.55 ▲ 2.63% LREN3 14.74 ▲ 4.17% VIVT3 35.44 ▲ 2.72% RAIL3 13.91 ▲ 1.16% KLABIN 17.45 ▲ 0.29% RAIA DROGASIL 18.78 ▲ 3.59% RDOR3 36.00 ▲ 2.42% HAPV3 10.59 ▲ 5.16% FLRY3 16.24 ▲ 3.11% SMTO3 15.96 ▼ 0.56% UGPA3 30.60 ▲ 1.66% VBBR3 32.61 ▲ 1.59% BBSE3 39.80 ▲ 1.32% BPAC11 57.16 ▲ 2.66% CURY3 33.81 ▲ 3.39% AERI3 2.08 ▲ 0.97% VIVARA 23.34 ▲ 3.37% COMPASS 25.08 ▲ 1.62% VAMOS 3.04 ▲ 2.70% SANB11 27.15 ▲ 3.43% ASAI3 8.78 ▲ 3.78% SBSP3 30.86 ▲ 2.87% WALMEX 49.31 ▲ 0.59% GMEXICO 197.70 ▲ 1.21% FEMSA 223.66 ▲ 0.58% CEMEX 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SILVER 60.31 ▼ 0.11% SOY 1,190 ▲ 0.83% CORN 458.50 ▲ 7.19% WHEAT 645.00 ▲ 5.52% COFFEE 332.35 ▼ 6.89% SUGAR 14.87 ▼ 1.65% ORANGE JUICE 149.90 — 0.00% COTTON 80.87 ▲ 6.18% COCOA 5,985 ▼ 5.14% BEEF 234.45 ▼ 0.34% CATTLE 354.45 ▼ 0.48% LITHIUM 72.50 ▼ 0.44% PETR4 39.42 ▲ 0.54% VALE3 74.25 ▲ 1.50% ITUB4 43.58 ▲ 2.32% BBDC4 18.54 ▲ 3.00% ABEV3 15.84 ▲ 0.76% BBAS3 20.36 ▲ 1.80% B3SA3 15.39 ▲ 4.06% WEGE3 46.44 ▲ 1.53% PRIO3 55.20 ▼ 0.74% SUZB3 41.50 ▲ 1.15% RENT3 40.45 ▲ 2.67% AZZA3 19.08 ▲ 3.36% CSAN3 4.02 ▲ 4.15% RAIZ4 0.36 ▼ 2.70% PCAR3 2.77 ▲ 0.36% GMAT3 3.97 ▲ 1.02% PSSA3 53.98 ▲ 1.18% CVCB3 1.26 ▲ 0.80% POSI3 3.95 ▲ 2.60% SLCE3 13.94 ▲ 1.09% NATU3 8.57 ▲ 1.30% BRKM5 6.52 ▲ 2.52% RANI3 7.97 ▲ 1.40% CSNA3 5.12 ▲ 6.67% CMIN3 5.06 ▲ 4.76% USIM5 8.44 ▲ 1.08% GGBR4 22.95 ▲ 2.09% ENEV3 26.95 ▲ 2.86% CPFE3 47.40 ▲ 2.40% CMIG4 11.30 ▲ 1.99% EQTL3 40.55 ▲ 2.63% LREN3 14.74 ▲ 4.17% VIVT3 35.44 ▲ 2.72% RAIL3 13.91 ▲ 1.16% KLABIN 17.45 ▲ 0.29% RAIA DROGASIL 18.78 ▲ 3.59% RDOR3 36.00 ▲ 2.42% HAPV3 10.59 ▲ 5.16% FLRY3 16.24 ▲ 3.11% SMTO3 15.96 ▼ 0.56% UGPA3 30.60 ▲ 1.66% VBBR3 32.61 ▲ 1.59% BBSE3 39.80 ▲ 1.32% BPAC11 57.16 ▲ 2.66% CURY3 33.81 ▲ 3.39% AERI3 2.08 ▲ 0.97% VIVARA 23.34 ▲ 3.37% COMPASS 25.08 ▲ 1.62% VAMOS 3.04 ▲ 2.70% SANB11 27.15 ▲ 3.43% ASAI3 8.78 ▲ 3.78% SBSP3 30.86 ▲ 2.87% WALMEX 49.31 ▲ 0.59% GMEXICO 197.70 ▲ 1.21% FEMSA 223.66 ▲ 0.58% CEMEX 22.02 ▲ 1.43% GFNORTE 188.00 ▲ 1.43% BIMBO 56.11 ▲ 0.32% TELEVISA 9.59 ▲ 1.05% AMX 23.02 ▲ 1.68% GAP 409.58 ▼ 1.00% ASUR 284.79 ▲ 0.41% OMA 234.01 ▼ 1.68% KOF 182.58 ▲ 0.93% GRUMA 285.09 ▲ 0.88% KIMBER 38.25 ▼ 0.49% SQM-B 67,656 ▼ 2.09% COPEC 5,981 ▼ 0.65% BSANTANDER 78.30 ▲ 1.03% FALABELLA 5,867 ▲ 0.27% ENELAM 84.61 ▲ 0.53% CENCOSUD 2,021 ▼ 1.73% CMPC 1,115 ▲ 1.86% BANCO CHILE 188.07 ▲ 0.57% LATAM AIR 26.08 ▼ 1.21% YPF 74,000 ▼ 2.34% GGAL 8,145 ▲ 3.36% PAMPA 5,145 ▼ 1.15% TXAR 662.50 ▼ 0.30% ALUAR 964.50 ▼ 0.41% TGS 9,470 ▲ 1.72% CEPU 2,319 ▲ 0.17% MIRGOR 17,250 ▲ 0.29% COME 45.79 ▲ 0.81% LOMA NEGRA 3,508 ▲ 0.29% BYMA 309.00 ▼ 0.24% TELECOM ARG 4,185 ▲ 1.58% ECOPETROL 15.43 ▲ 0.26% BANCOLOMBIA 82.79 ▲ 2.30% GRUPO AVAL 5.07 ▲ 1.00% CREDICORP 399.48 ▲ 1.93% SOUTHERN COPPER 175.63 ▲ 0.69% BUENAVENTURA 30.17 ▲ 2.10% MERCADOLIBRE 1,860 ▲ 2.91% NUBANK 13.80 ▲ 0.91% XP 16.94 ▲ 3.20% PAGSEGURO 9.29 ▲ 3.17% STONE 11.19 ▲ 2.05% GLOBANT 30.18 ▼ 3.56% TECNOGLASS 43.91 ▲ 1.78% GAP AIRPORT 234.39 ▼ 0.03% ASUR 284.79 ▲ 0.41% OMA AIRPORT 107.28 ▼ 0.97% AMX ADR 26.27 ▲ 1.66% FEMSA ADR 127.97 ▲ 0.76% CEMEX ADR 12.58 ▲ 1.66% PETROBRAS ADR 17.14 ▲ 0.65% VALE ADR 14.52 ▲ 2.07% ITAU ADR 8.54 ▲ 3.14% SANTANDER BR 5.37 ▲ 4.38% AMBEV ADR 3.08 ▲ 1.32% CSN 1.01 ▲ 5.69% GERDAU 4.51 ▲ 2.27% LATAM ADR 56.57 ▼ 0.82% BTC 64,001 ▲ 1.28% ETH 1,792 ▲ 2.72% SOL 78.08 ▲ 0.04% XRP 1.10 ▲ 0.95% BNB 574.49 ▲ 1.06% ADA 0.17 ▲ 0.11% DOGE 0.07 ▲ 1.70% AVAX 6.76 ▲ 1.15% LINK 7.93 ▲ 2.58% DOT 0.88 ▲ 6.17% LTC 44.72 ▲ 2.18% BCH 248.85 ▲ 4.66% TRX 0.33 ▼ 0.40% XLM 0.19 ▲ 1.42% HBAR 0.07 ▲ 0.81% NEAR 1.90 ▼ 0.91% ATOM 1.58 ▲ 2.01% AAVE 95.32 ▲ 4.45% 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since 2009
Friday, July 10, 2026

Market Reports Markets

Gold and Silver Keep Sliding as Rates, Not War, Drive the Metals

By · June 19, 2026 · 9 min read

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Key facts

  • Gold drifted lower again on Thursday, June 18, easing toward the low $4,210s an ounce.
  • Silver slipped into the mid-$65.70 range, extending its longer and sharper decline.
  • The slide continued even as a US-Iran peace deal was signed, oil fell, and the Strait of Hormuz moved toward reopening.
  • The real driver is interest rates: the Federal Reserve’s signal of higher rates ahead keeps weighing on metals that pay no yield.
  • Both now sit at or below the long-term trend lines that had supported them through the year.

Today’s focus

Here is the puzzle on every metals investor’s mind. A war closed the world’s most important oil route, and gold fell.

Now peace has arrived, oil is dropping, the Strait of Hormuz is reopening, and gold is still falling. Every reason usually given for owning precious metals, war, high oil, inflation fear, has come and gone, yet gold and silver keep bleeding lower.

The explanation is not that safe havens are broken. It is that this entire episode reached the metals through a different door: interest rates.

Gold drifted lower again on Thursday, easing toward the low $4,210s an ounce, while silver slipped into the mid-$65.70 range, both extending a grinding decline that has run for weeks. The fall came in defiance of everything that is supposed to lift safe havens: a US-Iran peace deal was signed, oil tumbled toward a two-month low, and the Strait of Hormuz, the oil chokepoint whose closure had rattled the world, moved toward reopening.

None of it helped. The reason is that the metals are being driven not by fear or by oil but by interest rates, and the US Federal Reserve’s recent signal that rates may rise rather than fall has kept the pressure firmly on.

01 The session in one read

Thursday was another quiet step down for precious metals. Gold eased toward the low $4,210s an ounce and silver slipped into the mid-$65.70 range, neither falling dramatically on the day but both continuing a slow, steady bleed that has dragged them well below their early-year highs.

Both are now sitting at or below the long-term trend lines that had supported them all year.

What makes the decline so striking is its timing. It is happening against a backdrop that, by every conventional rule, should be sending gold and silver higher, or at least steadying them.

That it is not is the whole story, and it points to a force bigger than the day’s headlines.

Our read: A rate-driven decline wearing a safe-haven disguise. The metals are not failing as havens; they are being priced as rate-sensitive assets, and until the rate picture turns, the grind lower is likely to continue.

Confidence: medium

02 The day’s levels

Metal Approx. level Direction
Gold (per ounce) Low $4,210s Lower
Silver (per ounce) Mid-$65.70 Lower, faster

The gap between the two tells its usual story. Silver has fallen far harder than gold over this stretch, as it almost always does, because it is the smaller and more volatile of the two.

Both, though, are pointed the same way, and both have slipped beneath the levels that had acted as a floor for much of the year.

Live Market IntelligenceCommodities — Live Market BoardInside: market breadth, the sector heatmap, currencies & rates, the Latin America scoreboard and the full instrument board.

Rio Times · Live Market Intelligence

Commodities — Live Market Board

Global
Jul 10, 2026 · 13:20

Brent crude · benchmark
75.75
-0.72%
L 75.31day rangeH 77.56

+10.36% over 12 months

Market breadth · 14 names
36% advancing

5 ▲ advancing9 declining ▼

Currencies, rates & key inputs
Gold
4,120
-0.26%

Silver
60.31
-0.11%

Copper
6.29
+1.22%

Iron ore
161.91
·

WTI crude
71.27
-1.12%

Full instrument board
Instrument Last Change YoY Prev. High Low Volume
GOLD 4,120 -0.26% +24.18% 4,131 4,145 4,082 73,750
SILVER 60.31 -0.11% +62.83% 60.38 61.20 59.25 19,172
BRENT 75.75 -0.72% +10.36% 76.30 77.56 75.31 28,961
WTI 71.27 -1.12% +7.06% 72.08 73.16 70.77 133,741
COPPER 6.29 +1.22% +13.39% 6.22 6.33 6.24 23,574
LITHIUM 72.50 -0.44% +80.08% 72.82 72.63 71.91 75,193
IRON ORE 161.91 +67.33% 161.91 161.91 1
SOY 1,190 +0.83% +17.48% 1,180 1,199 1,173 80,196
CORN 458.50 +7.19% +12.58% 427.75 461.00 447.50 186,287
WHEAT 645.00 +5.52% +17.22% 611.25 649.25 614.00 107,077
COFFEE 332.35 -6.89% +14.64% 356.95 340.70 318.60 24,635
SUGAR 14.87 -1.65% -8.55% 15.12 15.14 14.71 50,057
COCOA 5,985 -5.14% -31.54% 6,309 6,310 5,777 24,295
ORANGE JUICE 149.90 +0.00% -46.45% 149.90 149.95 143.25 456
COTTON 80.87 +6.18% +22.07% 76.16 79.67 78.28 15,888
BEEF 234.45 -0.34% +6.94% 235.25 232.15 229.00 21,853
CATTLE 354.45 -0.48% +10.33% 356.15 358.40 351.45 6,775
USD/BRL 5.10 -0.28% -8.60% 5.12 5.13 5.10

Largest moves today
CORN
458.50
+7.19%
COFFEE
332.35
-6.89%
COTTON
80.87
+6.18%
WHEAT
645.00
+5.52%
COCOA
5,985
-5.14%
SUGAR
14.87
-1.65%
COPPER
6.29
+1.22%
WTI
71.27
-1.12%

The session read
The Brent crude eased 0.72%, with breadth negative — 5 of 14 names higher. CORN led, while COFFEE lagged.

03 Why it moved — the war reached gold through the rate door

To understand Thursday, you have to understand the whole arc of this episode. When war closed the Strait of Hormuz earlier in the year, it did not lift gold.

Instead it sent oil prices surging, and higher oil fed straight into inflation. Higher inflation, in turn, forced markets to expect the US Federal Reserve to keep interest rates high, or even raise them.

And high interest rates are poison for gold and silver, which pay no income of their own.

So the war pushed the metals down, through rates rather than through fear. Now the same chain is working in reverse, but it is not helping.

The peace deal and falling oil have eased the inflation worry, which should be good for metals. But the Federal Reserve, at its meeting this week, signaled that it still leans toward higher rates, keeping the dollar strong and bond yields elevated.

With safe government bonds paying a real return, the opportunity cost of holding yield-free metal stays high, and that is what keeps gold and silver pinned down even as the geopolitical clouds clear.

04 Why the “safe haven” isn’t working

The deeper answer to the puzzle is this: a safe haven only protects against the specific danger investors are actually afraid of. For years, the fear was financial chaos, weak currencies and falling rates, and gold was the perfect shelter.

But the dominant fear right now is different. It is higher-for-longer interest rates, and gold offers no protection against that at all.

In fact it is one of the assets that suffers most from it.

That is why gold has spent this period behaving less like a haven and more like a rate-sensitive asset, falling when yields rise and the dollar strengthens. The classic triggers, war and oil and inflation, all turned out to feed the one thing gold cannot withstand.

The metal did its job; it is just that the job on offer was not the one it is built for.

05 The cross-asset board

The contrast with the rest of the market sharpens the point. After the Federal Reserve’s decision, stocks bounced back, with even the battered technology shares recovering much of their losses, because lower oil and the prospect of cooler inflation are good for company profits.

Risk assets could look past the rate worry to the brighter growth picture.

Gold and silver had no such escape. The same falling oil that lifted stocks removed a reason to own metals, and the same firm rate outlook that equities shrugged off landed squarely on the one asset class that cannot ignore it.

So the market split: shares up on the good news, metals down on the rate math. It is a vivid illustration of how differently the two respond to the very same events.

06 The technical picture

Both metals have broken below the long-term trend lines that guided them higher through the year, a sign that the correction has real technical force behind it rather than being a brief dip. Gold has slid toward the low $4,210s and silver into the mid-$65.70 range, with each testing the lower edges of their recent trading bands.

The levels to watch are those band floors. A decisive break lower would open the way to deeper support, while a steadying here, helped perhaps by central-bank buying or a softer dollar, would suggest the worst of the rate-driven selling has passed.

For now, with the trend lines broken and the dollar firm, the path of least resistance remains downward.

07 What to watch

  • Interest rates and the dollar. This is the master switch. Until the Federal Reserve softens its tone or the dollar weakens, the headwind for metals stays in place.
  • Bond yields. The higher the real return on safe bonds, the harder it is for yield-free gold and silver to compete.
  • Central-bank buying. Steady gold purchases by central banks remain a key long-term floor under the price, even as short-term traders sell.
  • Silver’s supply shortage. A years-long deficit tied to solar and electronics demand is the structural force that could reassert itself once the rate pressure eases.

Frequently Asked Questions

Did gold and silver go up or down on June 18, 2026?

Both drifted lower again. Gold eased toward the low $4,200s an ounce and silver slipped into the mid-$60s, extending a grinding decline that has run for weeks.

The moves were not dramatic on the day, but they continued a steady bleed lower that has left both metals well below their early-year highs.

Why are gold and silver falling even after the Iran peace deal?

This is the puzzle that has frustrated investors. Normally a war closing a key oil route would lift safe havens, and peace would let them ease gently.

Instead the opposite happened: the war pushed gold and silver down, and the peace deal is keeping them down. The reason is that the war reached the metals through interest rates, not through fear, and that channel has not reversed.

If oil is falling and inflation fears are easing, why doesn’t gold rise?

Lower oil should help, and briefly it did spark a bounce. But the bigger force is the US Federal Reserve’s signal that interest rates may rise rather than fall.

Higher interest rates and a strong dollar make safe, interest-paying assets like government bonds more attractive than gold and silver, which pay no yield. As long as that holds, the metals struggle to rally.

Why is silver falling faster than gold?

Silver almost always moves more sharply than gold in both directions. It is a smaller, more volatile market with an added industrial side, so when the rate-and-dollar pressure hits precious metals, silver tends to fall further.

It has dropped far more than gold from the early-year peaks.

Are gold and silver still safe havens?

Over the long run, many investors still treat them that way, and central banks keep buying gold. But in the short run, a safe haven only works when the thing investors fear is the thing the metal protects against.

Right now the dominant fear is higher-for-longer interest rates, and gold offers no protection against that, which is why it has behaved more like a rate-sensitive asset than a haven.

Connected Coverage

Thursday’s drift lower extended a decline that has defied the usual rules, with gold and silver falling through a war, an oil spike, and now a peace deal and falling oil alike. The common thread is the US Federal Reserve’s harder line on interest rates, which has lifted the dollar and bond yields and kept the pressure on metals that pay no yield.

The split with the wider market was stark: stocks, even battered technology shares, rebounded after the Fed decision on hopes of cooler inflation, while the same backdrop left precious metals grinding lower.

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