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Silver, gold stabilized after sharp decline

Silver, gold stabilized after sharp decline
Silver, gold stabilized after sharp decline

Investors counted "bumper gains" heading into the year-end trading, while gold and silver found their feet after a sharp drop from record highs?took a little froth out of precious metals' searing rise.

The oil prices held on to their gains overnight as Russia accused Ukraine of attacking the residence of President Vladimir Putin. Although Moscow did not provide any evidence to support its claims, this is a blow for U.S. peace efforts.

Donald Trump also added to the global geopolitical tensions when he said that he would support another major attack on Iran. China began a 10-hour live-firing exercise around Taiwan on February 2.

Silver and other precious metals experienced volatile price swings over the weekend due to a lack of liquidity across most markets. Silver fell 8.7% after hitting a record of $84 an ounce. This was the largest one-day drop since August 2020. It brought gold and copper with it.

The white metal rose 2.5% on Tuesday to $74.1 an ounce, and is still on course for a 156% annual gain. Gold gained 0.7%, to $4,361 an ounce after falling 4.4% overnight.

Tony Sycamore is an analyst at IG Sydney. He said that the initial gap in the price of silver was probably due to stop losses, panic buying, and the Chicago Mercantile Exchange increasing margin requirements. The move was short-lived, with no buyers at these high levels.

"We have seen a cooling of the precious metals, but I do not think that this trend is over. We still got deficits. We still got nation stockpiling. "We have export restrictions," Sycamore said. This generational bubble has ended? Not sure. "Jury's out on that."

The MSCI broadest index of Asia-Pacific stocks outside Japan, which includes Japan, rose 0.1% on Tuesday and is set to achieve a gain of 26.7% for the year, its best performance in 2017. The Nikkei 225 index of Japan shares fell 0.1%, but it was still up 26.7% for the year.

Hong Kong's Hang Seng index rose by 0.4%, while China's blue chip index rose by 0.2%. In Asia, all U.S. stock futures and European stock futures were largely unchanged.

Wall Street?finished down overnight as heavyweight tech stocks retreated after last week's gains.

Even so, U.S. stock prices were still on track to finish 2025 at record highs after a turbulent year marked by tariff wars and central bank policy, as well as simmering geopolitical conflicts.

DOLLAR?S?BAD YEAR

The dollar was stable on the currency market ahead of the Federal Reserve minutes for the December meeting, which are expected to show a central bank that is divided and unsure about its policy direction next year. The dollar index is set to experience its biggest annual drop in eight years, a decline of almost 10%.

The yen was hovering at?156.06 to the dollar, a little away from the 158-160 range that could prompt intervention by Japanese authorities. The euro was at $1.1777 and on track for a 13.7% gain this year.

The U.S. Dollar has been impacted by the prospect of further rate cuts next year and this has helped Treasuries to rally, particularly at the short end. The yield on two-year bonds fell 1 basis point, to 3.4586%. This is the fourth consecutive session that they have fallen. They were down nearly 80 basis points for the year.

The 10-year bond yield was set to drop by 46 basis points annually.

After a gain of over 2%, oil prices remained largely stable on Tuesday. Brent crude futures were unchanged at $61.92 per barrel after a 2.1% increase on Monday. U.S. West Texas intermediate crude fell 0.1% to $58.01 per barrel.

(source: Reuters)