Silver Trades Like Crypto as Precious Metals Hit New Highs

Gold also pushed to new records as investors reacted to prospects of interest rate cuts under a new Federal Reserve leadership in 2026, weaker bond yields, and growing concerns about long-term US dollar debasement. At the same time, Bitcoin stayed largely flat through December. The metals rally also reignited a long-running argument over stores of value, with Bitcoin supporters pointing to its fixed supply and long-term outperformance versus gold and silver, while critics argue recent years favor traditional commodities. The discussion was escalated by a much weaker US dollar, which many analysts see as a structural tailwind for scarce assets across both markets.
Silver Surges to Record Highs
Silver
According to markets publication The Kobeissi Letter, silver saw extreme price action shortly after futures markets opened, jumping roughly 6% to a record high before plunging around 10% within just over an hour. The spike and sell-off shed some light on how aggressively traders are positioning in the metal
The rally in precious metals is being driven by expectations of looser monetary policy in the United States. With a new Federal Reserve chair set to replace Jerome Powell
Silver’s appeal is also supported by strong industrial demand, as it is a key input in a wide range of manufacturing and technology applications. Alongside gold, it has become part of what investors often describe as the “debasement trade,” reflecting concerns about long-term confidence in the US dollar amid sustained monetary expansion.
On the other hand, the cryptocurrency market failed to mirror the momentum seen in metals. Bitcoin
BTC’s price action over the past month (Source: CoinCodex)
Bitcoin Supporters Push Back as Gold Bulls Claim Momentum
Gold and silver’s historic gains
That view was challenged by well known gold advocate Peter Schiff
The exchange attracted comments from Matt Golliher, co-founder of Bitcoin-focused wealth manager Orange Horizon Wealth, who pointed out that commodity prices tend to gravitate toward their production costs over time. He explained that higher prices incentivize increased production, expanding supply and eventually pressuring prices lower—an effect that does not apply to assets with a fixed supply
Golliher added that today’s elevated gold and silver prices are already making previously unprofitable sources economically viable, reinforcing the idea that supply dynamics ultimately cap long-term upside for commodities. This structural difference underpins Bitcoin’s appeal among its supporters, even though the cryptocurrency struggled to gain momentum over the past few months.
The debate is taking place against a backdrop of major macroeconomic shifts. The US dollar
Falling dollar strength and easing monetary policy from the Federal Reserve are likely to act as tailwinds for scarce assets, according to analyst Arthur Hayes





