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Current precious metals prices continue showing strong volatility after the recent correction phase. Gold is trading near $4,735 per ounce, while Silver is fluctuating around $76–$77 per ounce across global markets. In Pakistan, local bullion markets are pricing gold close to Rs483,500 per tola, while silver remains near Rs7,700–8,000 per tola.
Despite the sharp decline from earlier highs, broader macro conditions still suggest that the long-term precious metals cycle remains structurally supported rather than fully broken. Recent weakness has been driven more by interest rate expectations, ETF outflows, and geopolitical inflation pressure than by a collapse in long-term demand fundamentals.
One of the strongest long-term drivers remains central bank accumulation. Several countries continue increasing gold reserves as part of broader reserve diversification strategies. Unlike speculative flows, sovereign buying is generally less sensitive to short-term price swings, creating a stronger structural support zone during corrections.
Another important factor is the relationship between metals prices and real interest rates. Higher real yields temporarily pressured gold after oil prices surged during Middle East tensions, increasing inflation concerns and reducing expectations for immediate Federal Reserve easing. However, easing energy prices and improving diplomatic signals have recently helped metals recover from local lows.
Silver continues showing stronger long-term industrial demand compared to previous cycles. Expansion in AI infrastructure, renewable energy systems, advanced semiconductors, and electric vehicles is increasing silver consumption globally. Supply growth remains limited because most silver production comes as a byproduct of other mining operations.
The gold-silver ratio also suggests that silver still maintains relative upside potential if industrial demand remains firm and macro liquidity conditions improve later in the cycle. Historically, declining ratios often signal stronger participation in broader metals markets.
ETF positioning remains another major variable. Institutional inflows have not yet fully recovered to earlier peak levels, suggesting that sidelined capital could still return if monetary policy expectations become more supportive.
At the same time, geopolitical uncertainty continues supporting defensive demand for precious metals. Concerns involving energy routes, inflation stability, sovereign debt expansion, and currency volatility are keeping long-term interest in hard assets elevated across markets.
Mining companies are also benefiting from elevated long-term metals prices despite recent volatility. Profit margins for producers generally expand faster than spot metal prices during strong commodity cycles because operational costs often rise slower than revenue growth.
Overall, current market behavior suggests that the precious metals cycle is evolving into a broader macro-driven trend rather than ending completely. Short-term volatility may remain elevated, but structural demand from central banks, industrial consumption, and long-term portfolio allocation continues supporting the sector.
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