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#PreciousMetalsPullBackUnderPressure
Gold pulled back roughly $400 from its March peak near $5,400, currently hovering just above the $5,000 level. Silver has taken an even harder hit — tumbling more than 8% in a single session after Trump threatened military action against Iran, with futures now sitting around $69-70 per ounce after touching lows near $67.75 late in March.
The driver is a crowded set of headwinds hitting simultaneously. Rising oil prices are absorbing the bulk of the safe-haven bid that would normally flow into metals. A stronger dollar is adding additional downward pressure. And shifting rate expectations have given bond yields enough appeal to pull institutional money away from non-yielding assets like gold and silver.
What makes this pullback interesting is the negative correlation with oil that has developed. Typically geopolitical flare-ups push both oil and gold higher together. This cycle is different — energy is capturing the fear trade, leaving bullion without its usual crisis premium.
The structural picture has not changed. Silver is entering its sixth consecutive year of global supply deficit. Central banks have not stepped back from gold buying. The solar and industrial demand story for silver remains intact. Wells Fargo and J.P. Morgan both maintained bullish full-year targets despite the March-April drawdown, with JPM projecting silver could average $81 for the year.
The question the market is sitting with right now is whether this is a healthy correction inside a longer bull run, or the beginning of a more significant unwind now that momentum has stalled. The $5,000 level in gold and the $67-68 zone in silver are the lines worth watching. A clean hold there keeps the long-term thesis alive. A break below drags in a lot of technically-driven selling from investors who bought the parabolic leg higher.
For those with longer time horizons, this is the kind of volatility that tends to separate conviction from noise. For short-term traders, the lack of a clear catalyst to flip oil's dominance of the safe-haven trade means timing an entry here carries real risk.