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Silver’s $63 Squeeze: Rate Fears and Solar Shifts Overpower a Six-Year Supply Deficit

Silver is meant to thrive on contradiction. A market facing its sixth consecutive annual deficit and a near-total blockade of the world’s most important oil chokepoint would normally send prices soaring. But on Thursday the white metal fell to around $63.95 an ounce — its lowest since March 23 and a drop of more than 26% over the past month. The disconnect between physical scarcity and paper price is not a market failing; it is the result of two unrelated forces combining to crush demand.

The immediate spark came from the Persian Gulf. US strikes on Iranian targets entered a second day, and Tehran responded by sealing off the Strait of Hormuz to oil tankers and commercial shipping. Any vessel attempting the passage, Iran warned, would be fired upon. The strait handles roughly a fifth of global oil trade and over a third of liquefied natural gas shipments. Energy prices surged — and with them, inflation.

US consumer price data for May confirmed the shock. Headline inflation hit 4.2% year on year, the highest reading since April 2023 and up from 3.8% in April. Energy costs alone accounted for more than 60% of the monthly increase. Core inflation, stripping out food and energy, rose only 0.2% month on month in May — down from 0.4% in April — which tempered the worst fears. But the headline figure was enough to rekindle speculation about the Federal Reserve’s next move. Markets now fully price in a quarter-point rate hike at the December meeting, with the next FOMC gathering on June 17 looming large.

Higher interest rates are the classical enemy of zero-yielding assets like silver. And no matter how acute the geopolitical tension, the logic of tighter monetary policy has overwhelmed the logic of crisis hedging. The result: investors have fled silver, pushing prices to levels not seen in three months.

But the sell-off is not solely a macro story. On the demand side, a long-trusted driver is faltering. The photovoltaic industry, which had been a reliable growth engine for silver, is now actively reducing its consumption. According to Metals Focus, PV demand for silver dropped by 6% in 2025 to 186.6 million ounces, and a further 19% decline to roughly 151 million ounces is expected in 2026. The reason is straightforward: silver accounts for up to 29% of a solar module’s cost. Once prices climbed above $80 an ounce, manufacturers accelerated the search for cheaper alternatives. Longi Green Energy plans to replace silver with copper in mass production starting in the second quarter of 2026. Jinko Solar is preparing copper-based modules, and Shanghai Aiko Solar already offers silver-free cells. As a result, total industrial silver consumption fell by 3% to 657.4 million ounces last year — the first decline since the pandemic.

On the supply side, the fundamental picture remains tight. The Silver Institute projects a deficit of 46.3 million ounces for 2026, adding to cumulative shortfalls that have reached 820 million ounces since 2021. Inventories have been drawn down heavily: COMEX stocks slid from 531 million ounces in October 2025 to around 315 million ounces. And from next year, China will tighten silver export controls by requiring state licenses, effectively locking out smaller shippers and further narrowing available supply.

Yet these physical constraints have failed to prop up the price — and analysts see little relief until the macro headwind shifts. The LBMA consensus forecast for 2026 stands at an average of $79.57 per ounce, but the range is extraordinarily wide: from $42 to $165. Such a spread reflects the deep uncertainty facing the market. At the moment, the 50-day moving average is the key near-term gauge, and without a dovish signal from the Fed on June 17, the deficit is likely to provide a floor rather than a catalyst.

Thursday’s US producer price index will offer the next clue. If it comes in hot, pressure on silver is likely to persist, regardless of events in the Gulf. For all its structural scarcity, silver remains hostage to the tug-of-war between inflation, interest rates, and a solar industry that is rapidly rewriting the demand equation.

Silver’s 21% Monthly Rout Pushes Price to $64 as Inflation and Geopolitics Eclipse Supply Deficit

The white metal is in the grip of its steepest monthly selloff in years, shedding more than a fifth of its value as a toxic mix of hotter-than-expected inflation and escalating Middle East tensions forces investors to flee. Spot silver slumped to $64.45 an ounce on Wednesday, a 1.5% drop on the day that extended the month-to-date carnage past 21%. The slide has been relentless: each fresh catalyst—from US consumer price data to Iranian missile strikes—has only deepened the rout.

At the heart of the selloff is May’s US consumer price index, which rose 4.2% from a year earlier, accelerating from 3.8% in April and hitting its highest level since April 2023. The energy component was the primary driver, climbing 3.9% month-on-month and 23.5% on an annual basis—alone accounting for more than 60% of the total monthly increase. Core inflation, stripping out food and energy, still ran at 2.9%, well above the Federal Reserve’s target. That leaves the central bank with little room to strike a dovish tone at its next meeting on June 16–17, and the CME FedWatch Tool now shows over a 70% probability of further rate hikes by the end of 2026. With the yield on the ten-year US Treasury note sitting comfortably above 4.5%, the opportunity cost of holding a non-yielding asset like silver has become painfully clear.

Geopolitical turmoil has added a fresh layer of pressure. US military strikes against Iranian air-defense systems last week were followed by Iranian rocket attacks on American bases, driving oil prices sharply higher. That energy shock feeds directly into the inflation figures, reinforcing the narrative that price pressures will stay stubbornly elevated. The combination of a firmer dollar and rising real rates has made dollar-denominated bullion even more expensive for foreign buyers, while speculative longs have been forced to liquidate.

The technical picture offers little reassurance. On the weekly chart, the 10-period simple moving average has sliced below the 20-period average, a classic death cross that traders view as a bearish signal. The relative strength index has dropped to 32, inching toward oversold territory, but that alone has not sparked a reversal. The next support zone lies between $61 and $60, and a break below that range could open the door to $54—a former double-top level. A sustained move under $50 would threaten the long-term uptrend entirely.

Yet beneath the surface of this macro-driven carnage, the physical market tells a different story. The Silver Institute forecasts a sixth consecutive annual deficit in 2026, this time of 46.3 million ounces. On the demand side, industrial processing is expected to edge down 2% to roughly 650 million ounces as the photovoltaic sector reduces silver content per panel despite rising solar installations. But demand from data centers, artificial-intelligence infrastructure, and automotive applications continues to grow. Coeur Mining, meanwhile, reaffirmed its 2026 guidance of between 18.7 million and 21.9 million ounces of silver production, underscoring that mine supply remains constrained.

For now, the market is caught in a tug-of-war. Short-term macro headwinds—inflation, rate fears, a strong dollar, and geopolitical uncertainty—have overwhelmed the underlying supply deficit. Whether the pendulum swings back depends on how the Federal Reserve interprets the energy-driven inflation spike: as temporary noise or as a reason to keep policy tight for longer. Next week’s FOMC decision will provide the first definitive signal, and the outcome will determine whether silver’s structural support can finally reassert itself or if the selloff has further to run.

Cardano’s PreProd Upgrade Goes Live as Foundation Cuts Nearly Half of Budget Proposals

The Cardano Foundation has thrown a bucket of cold water on ecosystem spending, rejecting 28 of 69 budget proposals for 2026 — a 46% block rate by proposal count. The approved projects, worth 111.4 million ADA, represent just over a third of the roughly 331 million ADA requested. Another 13 proposals totaling 37.4 million ADA were met with abstentions, while a 25.4 million ADA request remains under review. The message is unmistakable: the days of blank-check funding are over.

The crackdown arrives as ADA trades at $0.16, down 84% from its 52-week high and 77% lower on a yearly basis. The technical picture is ugly: the relative strength index sits at 21.5, deep in oversold territory, and the 200-day moving average at $0.30 is a distant 46% above the current price. Total value locked in Cardano DeFi applications has cratered from roughly $905 million at the end of 2024 to below $140 million — an 85% collapse.

In a sign that institutional hands are catching the falling knife, addresses holding at least one million ADA now control 67.49% of the circulating supply, the highest concentration since 2017. That whale accumulation stands in stark contrast to the broader market exodus.

On the network side, Cardano’s PreProd testnet completed its scheduled transition to Protocol 11 today, the final dry run before the Van Rossem mainnet upgrade. Van Rossem is an intra-era hard fork that leaves the transaction structure untouched but bundles several improvements: faster Plutus script execution, higher ledger consistency, stronger node security, and unified built-in functions across Plutus V1, V2 and V3. The upgrade honors Max van Rossem, a key figure in Cardano’s governance evolution and a primary author of the network constitution.

The mainnet activation now hinges on a governance vote by DReps, stake pool operators and the constitution committee, with a possible hard fork window stretching from late June to mid-July. The Intersect budget process — which the Foundation has just prioritized — will ultimately be decided by DReps in a final ballot closing June 12. That vote will determine the actual disbursement from a 350 million ADA pool.

Meanwhile, the Leios testnet is set to launch June 23. Input Output Global has submitted a treasury request for 27.7 million ADA to bring the protocol to mainnet readiness by the end of 2026. Leios promises a 10- to 65-fold throughput increase, potentially exceeding 1,000 transactions per second.

Regulatory tailwinds could offer some relief. The SEC has classified ADA as a non-security, and the CME launched ADA futures in February. After the mandatory six-month trading period, the agency can rule on pending spot-ETF applications from Grayscale and others as early as August 9.

Whether the combination of technical milestones, whale conviction, and regulatory clarity can close the gap between network progress and price remains to be tested. The next real-world signal comes with Leios’s testnet debut on June 23 and the mainnet activation of Van Rossem in the weeks that follow.

Gold Caught in a Crossfire: India’s Import Bomb and Middle East Peace Drag on Prices

Gold is absorbing blows from two directions that are usually at odds. India’s surprise decision to double import duties on the metal in May has choked off legal demand and turbocharged the black market, while a sudden ceasefire between Israel and Iran has stripped away the geopolitical risk premium that propped up prices for weeks. Add an unexpectedly hawkish turn from the Federal Reserve, and the yellow metal is facing its steepest monthly slide in years.

India’s duty hike to 15% was intended to curb the nation’s gold hunger, rein in its trade deficit and support the rupee. Instead, it has handed a windfall to smugglers, who bypass the full 18.45% tax-and-duty burden and offer discounts of more than $200 per ounce on the gray market. Official importers cannot compete. Banks and refineries have slashed purchases, and the semi-pure gold segment that once gave Indian processors a tax edge has lost its advantage. Illegal inflows could climb back above 100 tonnes by 2026, costing the government an estimated $2.65 billion in lost tax revenue. The world’s second-largest jewelry market is now the epicenter of a growing shadow trade.

That local crackdown comes as the global safe-haven narrative dissipates. The formal end to reciprocal strikes between Israel and Iran has restored some normalcy in the region — flights are resuming in Tehran, schools are reopening in Israel — and the immediate crisis premium has evaporated. Brent crude has eased to $91.70 a barrel, and gold has given up much of its war-driven gains. The spot price last traded at $4,353.60, down roughly 8% on the month, after touching a low of $4,303.90 on Tuesday — a drop of 1.14% in a single session.

Central banks are still adding to their vaults on a structural basis, buying a net 19 tonnes in April alone, with Poland and China leading. Those purchases are immune to local tax changes and geopolitical headlines. But they are being overwhelmed by a far more potent force: the interest rate calculus in the United States. Kevin Warsh took the helm of the Fed at the end of May, inheriting a economy that shows no signs of cooling inflation. Goldman Sachs has scrapped its 2026 rate cut forecasts entirely, now penciling the first 25-basis-point reduction for June 2027 and a second for December 2027. The CME FedWatch Tool assigns a better-than-70% probability of a rate hike by December 2026. For a non-yielding asset, that is a powerful headwind.

Technically, the chart has soured. Gold is trading roughly 7% below its 50-day moving average, with a relative strength index of 31.9, flirting with oversold territory. The 50-day line itself previously sat near $4,632, a level that now marks psychological resistance. Analysts point to the next major floor at $4,000, and with a 52-week trough of $3,901 still on the radar, a retest cannot be ruled out if Wednesday’s US inflation data for May comes in hot.

Yet the market remains deeply polarized. Institutional demand from central banks in China and India shows no sign of abating, providing a long-term bid even as short-term speculative interest evaporates. For now, gold is caught between a structural floor built by sovereign buyers and a cyclical ceiling reinforced by rising real yields, a stronger dollar, and fading geopolitical fear. The next price move hinges on whether the macro headwinds prove strong enough to overwhelm the steady accumulation from the world’s monetary authorities.

XRP’s Institutional Inflow Surge and Network Upgrade Collide with a Stubborn Bear Market

The numbers tell two sharply conflicting stories for XRP. While the token has shed nearly 38% of its value since the start of the year and sits at $1.17 — a staggering 68% below its July 2025 peak of $3.65 — institutional money is pouring in at a pace not seen in 2025. Exchange-traded products dedicated to XRP attracted $132 million in May alone, making it the strongest month of the year. During the same period, Bitcoin and Ethereum funds suffered heavy redemptions, underscoring a selective appetite for digital assets.

That institutional conviction is mirrored on-chain. After an initial wave of panic that saw roughly 23 million XRP rushed onto centralized exchanges, the pattern reversed abruptly. More than 25 million tokens have since been withdrawn from trading platforms, a move typically associated with accumulation by deep-pocketed holders. Long-term investors expanded their positions by 22% in late May, signalling they view the current price territory as an entry point rather than an exit.

A rebranded ledger arrives on June 15

Amid the market turbulence, the XRP Ledger is preparing a technical milestone. On June 15 the network will activate version 3.2.0 of its core software, which comes with a symbolic and practical overhaul. The software, previously known as “rippled,” has been renamed “xrpld” to underscore that the ledger is an open protocol independent of Ripple Inc. Roughly 84% of XRPL nodes already run version 3.1.3, so the upgrade path is largely clear.

The new release promises a 40% reduction in server storage requirements, allowing nodes to operate more efficiently under heavier transaction loads. That efficiency is becoming critical as the network expands into DeFi applications, tokenization of real-world assets, and stablecoin settlements. Separately, the XRP Ledger Foundation published a draft proposal in late May for so-called AMM Swappable Curves, which would let liquidity providers choose among pricing formulas such as StableSwap or concentrated liquidity models. The aim is lower slippage and better capital efficiency, especially for stablecoins and tokenized assets. The proposal remains in draft form and requires validator approval — a process that can take months.

Price action trapped between support and resistance

Technically, XRP is in a precarious position. The token trades well below its 50-day moving average of $1.36 and near a critical support level at $1.03. A break below that floor would open the door to a test of the psychologically important $1.00 mark. On the upside, reclaiming $1.36 with conviction would require a meaningful pick-up in volume.

The current correction has lasted roughly 350 days. Historical XRP bear phases have stretched between 400 and 790 days and produced drawdowns of 85% to 90%. The present 70% decline is comparatively mild, which some analysts interpret as a sign of a maturing market structure. The relative strength index sits at 34.5, deep in oversold territory, suggesting the selling pressure may be exhausting itself.

Washington looms as the next catalyst

Broader macro forces are adding headwinds. Geopolitical tensions in the Middle East and rising oil prices have sapped risk appetite across crypto markets, and XRP has been unable to decouple from Bitcoin’s weakness. The most anticipated potential catalyst now is the CLARITY Act, which passed the US Senate Banking Committee in May. A full Senate vote has yet to be scheduled. Analysts at Standard Chartered see a near-term price target of $2.80 and project double-digit levels in the coming years, contingent on the bill becoming law.

The disconnect between XRP’s flagging spot price and the pace of institutional accumulation is striking. The ledger upgrade on June 15 provides a concrete, measurable improvement, but whether it can act as a catalyst in a market beset by geopolitical unease and regulatory uncertainty remains an open question. For now, the token’s fate may hinge less on its own technical progress and more on the calendar in Washington.