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See the Storm: Silver 5% Sell-off Doesn't Deter The Ongoing Bull Market

EDITOR'S NOTE: In a surprising turn of events, silver prices experienced a 5% sell-off, capturing the attention of investors and analysts worldwide. Despite this unexpected dip, the consensus remains positive: the structural bull market for silver is undeterred and continues to hold strong.

Even amidst the turbulence, the enduring bull market presents an encouraging outlook for silver. This resilience underlines the robustness of the precious metals market, demonstrating its ability to weather volatility and rapid market swings. As the silver market navigates this temporary setback, the strength of the ongoing bull market offers a beacon of optimism, assuring investors of silver's enduring potential amid economic fluctuations.

 

Source: Kitco News

(Kitco News) - A sharp selloff in silver has caught some investors off guard as the price is seeing solid selling pressure falling 5% on the day and dropping significantly below $25 an ounce.

However, while silver could see further selling pressure in the near term, some analysts said its structural bull market remains intact.

"Today's price action was mostly profit-taking and weak long liquidation from the shorter-term futures traders," said Jim Wykoff, senior technical analyst at Kitco.com. "However, strong follow-through selling pressure and a technically bearish weekly low close on Friday would begin to suggest a market top is in place. Bulls need to step up Friday."

July silver prices last traded at $24.38 an ounce, down nearly 5% on the day.

Edward Moya, senior market analyst at OANDA, said that while silver's selloff has been dramatic, the downside move is not surprising as the bullish momentum was looking a little exhausted.

"Can silver go lower, yes, but I don't see this as the beginning of a new bearish trend," he said.

Moya added that global economic uncertainty, the ongoing debt ceiling debate, the impending default deadline, and the banking crisis will continue supporting precious metals like gold and silver.

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"I think it's more likely we will see $30 in silver before we see $20 in silver, but within that range, there is going to be a lot of volatility," he said.

Daniel Ghali, senior commodity strategist at TD Securities, said he wasn't overly worried that silver's bull trend is over. He added that while the extent of the selloff has been surprising, he sees this more as a short-term technical move in the price.

Ghali added that a lot of the weakness in silver is the result of new momentum in the U.S. dollar; however, he said that he sees the U.S. dollar index's push to 102 points as short-lived short covering.

"We see this as a repositioning move in the U.S. dollar to reflect some profit taking from firms short the U.S. dollar," he said. "A lot of this selloff in silver we are seeing is technical in nature."

Along with shifting positioning in the U.S. dollar, analysts note that recession fears are causing silver to underperform gold significantly. More than 50% of silver demand comes from industrial applications and can be sensitive to global economic weakness.

Phillip Streible, chief market strategist at Blue Line Futures, noted that disappointing economic data out of China caused copper prices to see a major breakdown below its 200-day moving average, which could be weighing on silver.

Streible said that while silver could be a good buy at current levels, he is more neutral on the precious metal to see if it will hold support at around $23 an ounce.

Although silver remains in a healthy uptrend, Ghali said that he expects gold to continue to outperform in the precious metal. He noted that with TDS economists looking for the U.S. to fall into a recession this year, weak industrial demand will weigh on silver compared to gold.

 

Originally published by: Neils Christensen on Kitco News

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