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Silver's Overnight Leap Toward $100 Signals A New Phase In The Metals Rally
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Key Points
Silver, not gold, delivered the market's most important message on January 23. In a sharp overnight move that unfolded during Asian hours and carried into Europe, the metal vaulted from the $96 zone to nearly $100 an ounce.
TradingView showed silver printing a daily high near $99.37 before settling around $98.68, with the 4-hour view near $98.63 after touching $99.07. The weekly candle remained strong, with silver near $98.67.
That jump matters because it changes the story of the past week. For several sessions, gold had clearly taken the lead, with repeated Europe-night spikes and a steady march toward $5,000.
Silver, which had been the star earlier in the rally, looked hesitant and choppy while gold surged. January 23 looks like silver's answer: a fast catch-up move that suggests traders are rotating back into the higher-octane metal.
Gold stayed elevated, but its action was calmer. Spot gold hovered around $4,946, after a daily high near $4,967, consolidating just below the psychologically important $5,000 threshold. In other words, gold remained the anchor, while silver became the headline.
The best explanation for the silver burst is how these markets behave when momentum returns. Gold's overnight strength often fits the pattern of conservative reserve demand: steady, persistent, and largely indifferent to intraday noise.
Silver is different. It is smaller, more sensitive to speculative positioning, and prone to sudden air pockets and spikes. When traders see gold holding firm near record levels and volatility premiums rising, silver can become the preferred vehicle for leveraged catch-up.
Technically, the move also cleared a narrative barrier. The $100 level is not just a round number. It is a line that forces decisions from funds, dealers, and short-term traders.
Silver's daily momentum remains elevated, and the weekly trend is now stretched, which increases the odds of sharp pullbacks even if the broader trend stays up.
The immediate question is whether silver can hold above the mid-$90s after this burst. If it can, the rally widens from a gold-led repricing into a full precious-metals sprint. If it cannot, the next sessions may look less like a breakout and more like a volatility trap.
Silver surged overnight from the $96 area to just under $100, finally matching gold's recent speed.
The move looks like a catch-up burst driven by positioning and momentum, not the slow official buying that tends to favor gold.
With $100 now in sight, the rally's next test is whether silver can hold gains without the wild whipsaws that usually follow.
Silver, not gold, delivered the market's most important message on January 23. In a sharp overnight move that unfolded during Asian hours and carried into Europe, the metal vaulted from the $96 zone to nearly $100 an ounce.
TradingView showed silver printing a daily high near $99.37 before settling around $98.68, with the 4-hour view near $98.63 after touching $99.07. The weekly candle remained strong, with silver near $98.67.
That jump matters because it changes the story of the past week. For several sessions, gold had clearly taken the lead, with repeated Europe-night spikes and a steady march toward $5,000.
Silver, which had been the star earlier in the rally, looked hesitant and choppy while gold surged. January 23 looks like silver's answer: a fast catch-up move that suggests traders are rotating back into the higher-octane metal.
Gold stayed elevated, but its action was calmer. Spot gold hovered around $4,946, after a daily high near $4,967, consolidating just below the psychologically important $5,000 threshold. In other words, gold remained the anchor, while silver became the headline.
The best explanation for the silver burst is how these markets behave when momentum returns. Gold's overnight strength often fits the pattern of conservative reserve demand: steady, persistent, and largely indifferent to intraday noise.
Silver is different. It is smaller, more sensitive to speculative positioning, and prone to sudden air pockets and spikes. When traders see gold holding firm near record levels and volatility premiums rising, silver can become the preferred vehicle for leveraged catch-up.
Technically, the move also cleared a narrative barrier. The $100 level is not just a round number. It is a line that forces decisions from funds, dealers, and short-term traders.
Silver's daily momentum remains elevated, and the weekly trend is now stretched, which increases the odds of sharp pullbacks even if the broader trend stays up.
The immediate question is whether silver can hold above the mid-$90s after this burst. If it can, the rally widens from a gold-led repricing into a full precious-metals sprint. If it cannot, the next sessions may look less like a breakout and more like a volatility trap.
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