Silver prices are under modest pressure, dipping on Thursday after briefly testing April’s high at $33.70. The metal found support near the 50-day moving average at $32.80, a level now acting as a battleground for short-term positioning. While the broader trend remains constructive, silver’s inability to extend gains above resistance has traders eyeing technical indicators and external market signals for direction.
At 13:46 GMT, XAG/USD is trading $32.97, down $0.43 or -1.28%.
The pullback in silver mirrors similar price action in gold, which gave up early gains after touching a two-week high at $3345.47. A firmer U.S. dollar—up 0.2% on the day—and climbing Treasury yields pressured both metals. The 30-year Treasury yield hit 5.14%, its highest since October 2023, while the 10-year rose to 4.62%. Higher yields tend to weigh on non-interest-bearing assets like silver and gold by increasing the opportunity cost of holding them.
Silver’s near-term fate hinges on its reaction to the 50-day moving average. A sustained hold above $32.80 could reinforce bullish sentiment and potentially trigger another challenge of $33.70. A breakout above that level would open the door to a move toward $34.59. On the downside, a break below $32.80 risks a drop to Fibonacci support at $32.19, with stronger backing at the 200-day moving average at $31.42.
Gold continues to find underlying support from concerns over U.S. fiscal policy. Moody’s recent downgrade of the U.S. credit rating, citing a ballooning federal debt now exceeding $36 trillion, has stirred safe-haven interest. A controversial tax-and-spend bill passed by the House is expected to push deficits even higher, raising fears of a supply glut in Treasuries and supporting demand for hard assets like gold—and by extension, silver.
Traders should keep a close eye on silver’s behavior around the 50-day moving average. A bounce from here could trigger renewed upside momentum, especially if gold finds a base above its $3310 pivot. However, stronger yields and a resilient dollar continue to cap enthusiasm. For now, silver bulls need a firm reclaim of $33.70 to regain control, while a break below $32.80 would likely trigger technical selling into lower support levels.
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James Hyerczyk is a U.S. based seasoned technical analyst and educator with over 40 years of experience in market analysis and trading, specializing in chart patterns and price movement. He is the author of two books on technical analysis and has a background in both futures and stock markets.