Gold And Silver Keep Falling As Gold Sinks Below Its Long-Term Line
| Measure | Level | Change | Read |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gold (XAU/USD) | 4,289.86 | −0.88% | Sinks further below its long-term line. |
| Gold session range | 4,268–4,353 | - | Closed near the low. |
| Silver (XAG/USD) | 66.51 | −2.03% | Falls to its own long-term line. |
| Gold momentum (daily RSI) | ~32 | - | Heavily sold, not yet a turn. |
| Silver key level | ~66 | - | The last support in play. |
Read as a whole, the table shows a market under one consistent pressure rather than five separate moves: both metals down, both near their lows, both with momentum deep in weak territory. The unsigned levels matter more than usual here, because gold has already lost its trend line and silver is sitting on the last one left.
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 GlobalJun 8, 2026 · 03:30
Brent crude · benchmark
97.25
+4.47%
L 95.01day rangeH 97.75
Market breadth · 15 names 27% advancing
4 ▲ advancing11 declining ▼Currencies, rates & key inputs Gold 4,329 -0.19%
Silver 67.18 -2.56%Copper 6.28 +0.31%
Iron ore 161.91 ·WTI crude 94.33 +4.19%
Full instrument board
| Instrument | Last | Change | YoY | Prev. | High | Low | Volume |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| GOLD | 4,329 | -0.19% | +29.91% | 4,337 | 4,378 | 4,293 | 40,565 |
| SILVER | 67.18 | -2.56% | +83.10% | 68.94 | 68.60 | 66.31 | 13,454 |
| BRENT | 97.25 | +4.47% | +45.06% | 93.09 | 97.75 | 95.01 | 7,042 |
| WTI | 94.33 | +4.19% | +44.48% | 90.54 | 94.85 | 92.20 | 47,254 |
| COPPER | 6.28 | +0.31% | +27.98% | 6.26 | 6.31 | 6.23 | 9,461 |
| LITHIUM | 78.30 | -5.98% | +110.37% | 83.28 | 81.53 | 78.02 | 487,013 |
| IRON ORE | 161.91 | - | +69.33% | 161.91 | 161.91 | 1 | |
| SOY | 1,117 | -0.40% | +5.78% | 1,122 | 1,125 | 1,116 | 9,270 |
| CORN | 415.50 | -0.48% | -4.15% | 417.50 | 421.00 | 415.00 | 18,149 |
| WHEAT | 576.25 | -0.65% | +6.32% | 580.00 | 583.25 | 574.75 | 6,539 |
| COFFEE | 246.65 | -0.20% | -31.78% | 247.15 | 249.20 | 243.30 | 26,616 |
| SUGAR | 14.12 | -1.05% | -15.30% | 14.27 | 14.50 | 14.09 | 117,940 |
| COCOA | 3,823 | -3.58% | -62.42% | 3,965 | 4,034 | 3,799 | 21,821 |
| ORANGE JUICE | 159.20 | -5.46% | -43.03% | 168.40 | 170.50 | 158.40 | 575 |
| COTTON | 77.28 | +3.19% | +17.11% | 74.89 | - | - | - |
| BEEF | 241.65 | -3.02% | +6.45% | 249.18 | 245.23 | 240.80 | 36,004 |
| CATTLE | 353.90 | +0.15% | +13.56% | 353.38 | 358.75 | 351.20 | 11,502 |
| USD/BRL | 5.15 | -0.32% | -7.39% | 5.17 | 5.17 | 5.15 | - |
78.30
-5.98% ORANGE JUICE
159.20
-5.46% BRENT
97.25
+4.47% WTI
94.33
+4.19% COCOA
3,823
-3.58% COTTON
77.28
+3.19% BEEF
241.65
-3.02% SILVER
67.18
-2.56%
The session read The Brent crude rose 4.47%, with breadth negative - 4 of 15 names higher. WTI led, while LITHIUM lagged.
From The Rio TimesRelated coverage · 6 Jun 2026 Brazil Trade Surplus Climbs 10.8% on Soy and Copper Read → 03 Why it moved - a hot jobs report and a firmer dollar
The single most diagnostic force was Friday's US jobs report, and its shadow carried into Monday. The economy added far more jobs than forecast, which tells the Federal Reserve it has no reason to rush into cutting interest rates, and in minutes the market went from pricing cuts to pricing a possible hike.
That reached the metals through the dollar and through yields. Gold and silver pay no income, so when cash and bonds offer a solid return that looks set to stay high, and the dollar firms on top, both metals become harder to justify and the money keeps leaving.
04 The metals and their drivers| Asset | Level | Change | Note |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gold (XAU/USD) | 4,289.86 | −0.88% | Below its long-term line, no bounce. |
| Silver (XAG/USD) | 66.51 | −2.03% | Harder hit; now at its own line. |
| US dollar tone | Firm | + | Stronger after the jobs data; weighs on both. |
| Rate-cut odds for 2026 | Slashed | − | Some traders now bet on a hike. |
The story within the story is that silver is leading the fall, as it tends to in both directions, and has now given back the cushion that set it apart from gold a few days ago. With the dollar firm and rate-cut hopes gone, there is no offsetting bid in either metal.
05 The precious-metals scoreboard| Asset | Type | Change |
|---|---|---|
| Gold | Safe-haven metal | −0.88% |
| Silver | Safe-haven / industrial | −2.03% |
Both safe-haven metals fell together, which places this as a top-down move driven by the dollar and rates rather than anything specific to one of them. When the monetary metals sell off in tandem like this, the cause is almost always the cost of holding them rather than their own supply or demand.
06 The technical pictureMomentum on both metals is deep in weak territory, with gold's daily gauge near 32 and silver's near 34, the kind of washed-out readings that show heavy selling but do not, on their own, mark a bottom. A market can stay sold for a long time when the force pushing it down has not eased.
The levels are what matter now. Gold has already broken below its long-term line near 4,316, which now sits overhead as resistance about 1% above the close, while silver is sitting right on its own long-term line near 66, with little clear support beneath if it gives way.
07 What to watch-
The dollar and rates: whether the post-jobs-report strength in the dollar extends or fades is the single biggest driver for both metals.
Silver's line near 66: the last clear support in the complex; holding it could steady the slide, losing it opens the next leg down.
Gold's broken line near 4,316: now resistance overhead; gold needs to reclaim it to signal the trend is no longer down.
Any rate-cut signal: a softer tone from the Federal Reserve is the one thing that would take the weight off, and none is in sight.
Friday's US jobs report came in far stronger than expected, which killed hopes of a Federal Reserve rate cut this year and pushed some traders to bet on a hike. That lifted the dollar and Treasury yields, and metals that pay no income kept losing ground into Monday, with gold down 0.88% and silver down 2.03%.
How far have the metals fallen?Gold has broken below its long-term trend line and kept sinking, closing near 4,290 dollars, while silver has dropped to its own version of that line near 66.50, the last cushion it had left. Neither metal has managed a bounce across the run.
Is the metals market oversold?Both daily momentum gauges are deep in weak territory, with gold's near 32 and silver's near 34 on a scale where below 30 is washed-out. That points to a heavily sold market, but a weak gauge alone is not a signal that the fall has ended.
What level should investors watch next?Silver's long-term line near 66 is the level that matters most, because gold has already broken its own. If silver holds there the wider slide could steady, and if it gives way the next leg down opens with little support beneath.
Why does a strong dollar hurt gold and silver?Gold and silver are priced in dollars and pay no income, so a stronger dollar makes them costlier for buyers using other currencies and less attractive than cash and bonds. With the dollar firm and rates expected to stay high, the headwind on both metals has not let up.
Connected CoverageMonday's fall extends the break covered in Friday's report on gold breaking below its long-term line as silver crashed, the latest chapter after the stretch when gold and silver sat dead while copper climbed. For the wider backdrop, see the Rio Times business and markets coverage on the Federal Reserve and the dollar.
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