Silver held near $72.00 an ounce on Tuesday, clinging to its 200-day simple moving average, as traders awaited the Federal Reserve's interest-rate decision that could determine the metal's next direction.
"Silver is at a critical technical juncture — a break below the 200-day SMA could trigger a move toward $50, while a hold could set up a recovery toward $80," said Omar Tariq, commodities analyst at Edgen.
The metal has fallen from its 2026 peak above $89 after failing to break that level, negating a double-bottom pattern above $60. Prices broke below $80 last week but found support at $72, according to market data. COMEX silver stocks have drawn down 12 percent since March, exchange data shows, providing a physical-market floor that has helped slow the decline.
The Federal Reserve is widely expected to hold its benchmark rate at 3.5 percent to 3.75 percent when it announces its decision Wednesday at 2 p.m. ET, according to FactSet data. The central bank last cut rates in December 2025 and has held steady through 2026 as inflation accelerated. The Consumer Price Index rose to an annual rate of 4.2 percent in May, the highest since April 2023, while the headline CPI hit 3.8 percent in April and the Producer Price Index climbed to 6 percent, according to Bureau of Labor Statistics data.
Inflation and the Dollar Weigh on Silver
The inflation data has shifted the balance of risks. Energy costs — the energy CPI index jumped to 17.53 percent in April — are feeding through supply chains, raising the odds that the Fed keeps rates higher for longer. The US Dollar Index has consolidated between 96.50 and 100.50 since the US-Iran conflict, with a double-bottom pattern forming above 97.80 that points to a potential break toward 100.50, according to daily chart analysis.
A stronger dollar typically pressures silver, which is priced in the US currency. The 10-year Treasury yield has risen above 4.50 percent and is nearing the 4.60 percent to 4.70 percent range, with a break above 4.70 percent potentially taking yields toward 5 percent, according to market data. Higher yields increase the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding assets like silver.
What Comes Next
The Fed's Summary of Economic Projections and the dot-plot will be the key release. Bank of America US economist Aditya Bhave said the June dot-plot could show the Fed on hold for the rest of 2026, with at least three of the 12 FOMC voting members potentially projecting rate hikes. New Fed Chairman Kevin Warsh, holding his first press conference at 2:30 p.m. ET, has previously suggested the central bank should provide less guidance on future rate moves and expressed confidence that the AI boom will boost productivity and ease inflation.
For silver, the path is binary. A hawkish hold that strengthens the dollar and pushes yields above 4.70 percent would likely break the 200-day SMA support at $72, opening a move toward $50 — the level that would confirm a full correction from the 2026 highs. A dovish surprise or signs that Warsh is open to eventual cuts could trigger a recovery above $80, with the next resistance at $89, the 2026 peak.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.