Gold and Silver Find No Bottom, Sliding Deeper Into the Abyss

Key Facts

  • Gold sank 2.01% to 4,174 on Tuesday June 9 — its lowest since late March, closing right at the low.
  • Silver fell 2.46% to 63.71, breaking below the long-term line that was its last cushion.
  • Yesterday’s steadying did not last, as gold was rejected at the line it had tried to reclaim.
  • A firm dollar and high rates kept pressing on metals that pay no income.
  • Wednesday’s inflation data looms, the next test that could deepen the fall or bring relief.

Today’s Focus

The brief calm in precious metals lasted exactly one day. Gold and silver tumbled again on Tuesday, wiping out the prior session’s bounce.

A flicker of hope from talk of a Middle East ceasefire lifted gold early on, but it could not hold, and both metals slid to close near their lows.

The reason is unchanged: a firm dollar and high interest rates keep punishing assets that pay nothing to hold, and no floor has appeared.

What matters today. With Wednesday’s inflation report next, the metals are falling with little visible support beneath them.

Gold sank 2.01% to 4,174 and silver 2.46% to 63.71 on Tuesday, both closing at their lows and erasing the prior day’s bounce. Gold is now at its weakest since late March, rejected at the long-term line it had tried to reclaim, while silver broke below the line that was its last support. A firm dollar and high US interest rates remain the drivers, and an early pop on Middle East ceasefire hopes faded within hours. Both metals look beaten down to extremes, yet there is little sign of a floor. The next test is Wednesday’s US inflation report.

Gold and Silver Find No Bottom, Sliding Deeper Into the Abyss
Gold and Silver Find No Bottom, Sliding Deeper Into the Abyss

01 The session in one read

Gold closed at 4,174, down 2.01%, and silver at 63.71, down 2.46%, both at the low end of their day and both at fresh lows for this slide. The single day of steadying that came before it now looks like a pause, not a turn.

The move was shared and one-directional, the two metals falling together for the same reason. After a brief lift on ceasefire hopes, the selling resumed and carried both to the close.

Assessment — still falling, no floor in sight HIGH

The dominant driver is a firm dollar and high interest rates, which keep pressing on metals that pay no income. The thing to watch is that no clear support has formed beneath either metal, leaving them exposed to Wednesday’s inflation data.

02 The day’s numbers

Measure Level Change Read
Gold (XAU/USD) 4,174.33 −2.01% Lowest since late March.
Gold session range 4,173–4,258 Closed at the low.
Silver (XAG/USD) 63.71 −2.46% Broke its last support.
Gold momentum (daily) ~27 Deeply washed-out.
Silver momentum (daily) ~31 On the floor.

Read together, the table shows a market in a one-sided fall: sharp losses on the day, both metals at their lows, and momentum about as weak as it gets. The figures carry the message, with no support level holding and the readings showing exhaustion that has not yet sparked a turn.

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03 Why it moved — a firm dollar overpowers a flicker of hope

The clearest driver was the dollar and interest rates, the same pair that has pushed the metals down all stretch. With US rates high and some traders even betting the Federal Reserve could raise them, cash and bonds keep offering a return that gold and silver, which pay nothing, simply cannot match, so money keeps flowing out of the metals.

A brief hope did appear and then vanished. Talk of a Middle East ceasefire lifted gold early in the day, easing the fears that sometimes send buyers into safe havens, but the relief faded within hours and the firm dollar reasserted itself, dragging both metals to close at their lows.

04 The metals and their drivers

Asset Level Change Note
Gold (XAU/USD) 4,174.33 −2.01% Rejected at its broken line.
Silver (XAG/USD) 63.71 −2.46% Through its last support.
US dollar tone Firm + Rallied again; weighs on both.
Rate-cut hopes for 2026 Fading Some now expect a hike.

The story within the story is that silver is once again leading the fall, as it tends to in both directions, breaking the support that had set it apart only a day earlier. With the dollar firm and rate-cut hopes gone, neither metal has an offsetting bid.

05 The precious-metals scoreboard

Asset Type Change
Gold Safe-haven metal −2.01%
Silver Safe-haven / industrial −2.46%

Both safe-haven metals fell together again, the pattern of this whole slide, which marks it as a top-down move driven by the dollar rather than anything specific to either one. When the monetary metals drop in tandem like this, the cause is almost always the cost of holding them rather than their own supply or demand.

06 The technical picture

Both metals are deeply washed-out, with gold’s daily gauge near 27 and silver’s near 31, the kind of readings that show heavy, sustained selling. They have been this low before in this slide without marking a bottom, a reminder that an exhausted market can stay exhausted while the pressure holds.

The levels tell the story of broken support. Gold was rejected at its long-term line near 4,184 and now sits below it, turning that line into resistance overhead, while silver has slipped beneath its own long-term line near 63.9, the last cushion it had been holding, leaving little clear support before the next leg down.

07 What to watch

  • Wednesday’s US inflation data: the immediate catalyst; a hot reading would deepen the fall, a soft one could bring relief.
  • The dollar and rates: whether the dollar’s strength extends is the single biggest driver for both metals.
  • Gold’s broken line near 4,184: now resistance overhead; gold needs to reclaim it to signal the trend is no longer down.
  • Silver’s lost line near 63.9: the support it just broke; getting back above it would be the first sign of steadying.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why did gold and silver fall on June 9, 2026?

Both metals dropped sharply, gold down 2.01% to 4,174 and silver 2.46% to 63.71, as a firm dollar and high US interest rates kept pressing on assets that pay no income. A brief pop on hopes of a Middle East ceasefire faded fast, and both closed near their lows.

Wasn’t the market steadying just a day earlier?

It was, but the steadying did not last. Gold had clawed back to test the long-term line it broke last week, but on Tuesday it was rejected and fell straight back through, while silver gave up the last support it had been holding. The one-day pause looks like a brief bounce in a continuing slide.

How far have the metals fallen now?

Gold is at its lowest level since late March, having erased its gains for the year, while silver has broken below the long-term line that was its last cushion. Both have fallen roughly 10% over the past month, with momentum near the most washed-out readings of this stretch.

What keeps pushing the metals down?

The same forces as before: a firm dollar, high interest rates and expectations the Federal Reserve could even raise rates rather than cut. Gold and silver pay no income, so when cash and bonds offer solid, rising returns, money keeps leaving the metals.

What should investors watch next?

Wednesday’s US inflation report is the immediate catalyst, with a hot reading likely to deepen the pressure and a soft one offering possible relief. For now there is little visible support beneath the metals, so the dollar and interest-rate expectations remain the forces to watch.

Connected Coverage

Tuesday’s fall erases the pause covered in our report on gold and silver steadying and clawing back toward gold’s broken line, resuming the slide detailed in gold and silver falling below their long-term lines. For the wider backdrop, see the Rio Times business and markets coverage on the Federal Reserve and the dollar.

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