Today: 4 June 2026
Gold Hits $4,500, Silver Nears $70, Platinum Surges: Why Precious Metals Are Exploding as Stocks Hover Near Records
23 December 2025
6 mins read

Gold Hits $4,500, Silver Nears $70, Platinum Surges: Why Precious Metals Are Exploding as Stocks Hover Near Records

December 23, 2025 — In a holiday-shortened week when many traders expected quiet markets, precious metals delivered the opposite: gold pushed to fresh all-time highs near the $4,500 mark, silver flirted with $70, and platinum ripped to its strongest levels since the 2008 era. At the same time, U.S. equity futures were barely budging, with the S&P 500 sitting within striking distance of record territory as investors waited for delayed U.S. economic data that could reshape the 2026 rate-cut debate.

The result is a striking end-of-year snapshot of 2025’s market narrative: a weakening dollar, a growing belief that U.S. interest rates have further to fall, and a world where geopolitical risk has become a daily input into pricing—whether you’re trading bullion, buying miners, or simply watching your retirement account.

Gold price action: record highs just shy of (and above) $4,500

Gold’s latest run has been powered by a familiar cocktail—safe-haven demand, currency weakness, and interest-rate expectations—but the numbers still look extraordinary. On December 23, spot gold hit a record around $4,497.55 per ounce before easing slightly, while U.S. gold futures also traded above $4,500.

What stands out is not just the level, but the persistence. Reuters described 2025 as gold’s biggest annual jump since 1979, with bullion up roughly 70% for the year.

That “since 1979” comparison is now becoming shorthand across market coverage, because it links today’s rally to a historical period defined by geopolitical upheaval and inflation anxiety—two themes investors feel are back in the spotlight, even if the drivers differ in detail. Axios+1

Silver price hits new milestones: a $70 market with strategic tailwinds

Silver has been even more explosive than gold. On December 23, silver pushed to an all-time high near $69.98 and traded around the high-$69 range, extending a 2025 rally of roughly 140%+ by year-end measures.

Unlike gold—often framed first as a monetary metal—silver sits at the crossroads of investment and industry. Reuters linked silver’s surge to supply deficits, industrial demand, and strong investment inflows, a combination that can turn a rally into a squeeze when liquidity thins (as it often does around year-end holidays).

There’s also a policy angle: the U.S. government’s updated 2025 List of Critical Minerals explicitly added silver, reflecting the metal’s importance to supply chains and national security debates. That “strategic” label has become part of the bull case many traders cite when arguing silver is not simply following gold—it has its own demand story. U.S. Department of the Interior+1

Platinum and palladium jump: the “other” precious metals are now leading, too

Gold and silver may dominate headlines, but platinum has been the breakout surprise for many investors watching the broader metals complex. On December 23, platinum traded around $2,180+ per ounce, reaching its highest levels in roughly 17 years by several measures, while palladium hit a three-year high.

BullionVault noted an additional twist: platinum has been making fresh records in many non-dollar currencies, even as the U.S. dollar weakens—an important detail because it suggests the move isn’t only a “USD story,” but part of a broader re-pricing of hard assets globally. BullionVault+1

Why precious metals are surging now: weaker dollar, rate-cut bets, and a “debasement trade”

So why is this happening in late December, when markets often drift?

1) The dollar is sliding—and 2025 has been brutal for USD bulls

Reuters reported the U.S. dollar was on track for its biggest annual decline since 2017, while other coverage framed the dollar as still fundamentally “overvalued” despite the pullback. A weaker dollar tends to be supportive for dollar-priced commodities like gold and silver because it can boost overseas demand and reinforce the “store of value” narrative. Reuters+2Reuters+2

BullionVault captured the mood with the market phrase of the moment: the “debasement trade”—a shorthand for investors seeking refuge from currency erosion fears, fiscal deficit worries, and political uncertainty by rotating into scarce assets. BullionVault+1

2) Investors expect more U.S. rate cuts—and the Fed story is shifting

Markets have been repricing 2026. Reuters and BullionVault both pointed to expectations that rates may fall further next year, with investors increasingly focused on the possibility of a more dovish Fed leadership tilt in 2026.

The mechanics matter: gold and silver don’t pay interest, so when investors believe interest rates are likely headed lower (and real yields may ease), the “opportunity cost” of holding bullion can fall—often a key accelerant in precious-metals rallies. Reuters+1

3) Geopolitics is back in the driver’s seat, with Venezuela a key flashpoint

Axios and Reuters both highlighted U.S.-Venezuela tensions as a major factor supporting demand for safe havens.

Axios reporting described the U.S. pursuing and interdicting sanctioned oil tankers tied to Venezuela, including operations involving Coast Guard pursuit and coordination with Panama—part of a broader pressure campaign on Venezuela’s government. Reuters separately reported President Donald Trump ordered a “blockade” of sanctioned oil tankers moving in and out of Venezuela and said he wasn’t ruling out the possibility of war, a geopolitical escalation that tends to lift demand for traditional hedges like gold. Axios+1

BullionVault also pointed to ongoing tensions in the Middle East and stalled negotiations over Ukraine as additional background fuel for the metals bid—suggesting that even if Venezuela grabs the latest headlines, the market’s risk premium is broader than one region.

4) Central bank and institutional demand are still part of the story

Beyond daily headlines, the structural bid matters. Reuters reported that central bank demand has remained a meaningful pillar in 2025’s gold market, while other reporting emphasized the role of investment vehicles like ETFs and the global spot/futures ecosystem that transmits momentum quickly once prices break psychological thresholds.

Stock market today: futures steady, S&P 500 close to records, and GDP data finally due

While metals were sprinting, U.S. equities were largely in “wait-and-see” mode.

Reuters reported on December 23 that Wall Street futures were only slightly higher (with Dow futures roughly flat and S&P 500/Nasdaq futures modestly positive) as traders positioned for the year’s final batch of key economic data. The headline risk wasn’t just the numbers—it was the timing: the third-quarter GDP release had been delayed by what Reuters described as a record government shutdown, creating pent-up demand for clarity on growth momentum.

Investopedia similarly reported muted moves in stock futures and noted that, after Monday’s gains, the S&P 500 finished the prior session extremely close to its all-time closing high. The backdrop is classic late-December: hopes for a “Santa Claus rally,” thinner liquidity, and investors reluctant to take big new positions ahead of year-end. Investopedia+1

The key U.S. data points investors were watching on Dec. 23

Across market coverage, the same calendar items kept surfacing:

  • Third-quarter GDP (delayed release)
  • Durable goods orders (also delayed in some schedules)
  • Consumer confidence
  • Federal Reserve industrial production and capacity utilization data

These releases matter not only for the “growth story,” but because they can change how markets price the path of interest rate cuts in 2026—directly feeding back into both equity valuations and precious metals’ “non-yielding asset” narrative. Reuters+2Reuters+2

Notable movers: Novo Nordisk, Eli Lilly, defense, and miners

Even on a data-heavy morning, a few corporate stories were competing for attention:

  • Novo Nordisk surged in premarket trading after the FDA approved an oral Wegovy pill, a development that also pressured Eli Lilly shares.
  • U.S.-listed precious metals miners extended gains as gold and silver hit new records.
  • Huntington Ingalls jumped after President Trump announced plans for a new “Trump class” of battleships—part of the broader 2025 theme where defense-related names have been strong. Reuters+1

The bigger picture: 2025 has been a “hard assets” year—and the surprises keep coming

By late December, market narratives tend to crystallize into “what worked” and “what didn’t.”

Reuters’ year-end market wrap described 2025 as a year of surprises, noting that global equities recovered from tariff-related turbulence to finish higher overall, while gold stood out as the ultimate storm shelter—on track for its best year since 1979.

Another Reuters analysis focused on how traditional “safety” trades didn’t always behave as expected—yet precious metals (gold, silver, platinum) emerged as some of the year’s biggest winners, often outperforming many classic defensive allocations. Reuters

The common thread across these retrospectives is that investors ended 2025 paying up for two things at once:

  1. growth exposure (especially in selective equities), and
  2. protection against geopolitical shocks and currency uncertainty (via hard assets).

What happens next: the risks and catalysts heading into 2026

With gold and silver hovering near psychologically important levels ($4,500 and $70), markets are entering a phase where momentum and positioning can matter as much as macro fundamentals—especially during thin holiday trading.

Here are the catalysts that mattered most going into year-end and early January:

  • U.S. economic data clarity: GDP, consumer confidence, and manufacturing/production metrics can reshape the “soft landing vs. slowdown” narrative—and, with it, rate-cut expectations. Reuters+1
  • The dollar’s direction: if the USD rebound thesis gains traction, it can cool metals; if dollar weakness persists, it can keep bullion supported.
  • Geopolitical escalation (or de-escalation): Venezuela-related enforcement actions, plus the broader Middle East/Ukraine backdrop cited by market analysts, remains a live variable for safe-haven demand.
  • Liquidity and volatility: Reuters highlighted low volatility measures and “Santa Claus rally” dynamics for equities—conditions that can change quickly if a surprise headline hits. Reuters+1

Bottom line

On December 23, 2025, the message from markets was unusually clear for late December: the gold price and silver price are not merely drifting higher—they’re being repriced in real time around the twin forces of a weaker dollar and renewed geopolitical anxiety, while platinum is signaling that the rally has broadened beyond the traditional “headline” precious metals. Reuters+3Reuters+3BullionVault+3

Meanwhile, U.S. stocks are still leaning toward optimism—with the S&P 500 close to record highs—but the next leg for both equities and metals increasingly hinges on what the delayed GDP print and other year-end economic updates say about where the U.S. economy is heading into 2026.

Stock Market Today

  • Ryanair Holdings Share Price Analysis Indicates Potential 10% Undervaluation
    June 4, 2026, 12:09 PM EDT. Ryanair Holdings (ISE:RYA) stock declined 6.2% last week but rose 7% over the past month and 50.6% over three years, reflecting changing investor sentiment. Using a Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) model, Simply Wall St estimates Ryanair's intrinsic value at €26.67 per share, suggesting it is about 10% undervalued compared to the current price. Ryanair, a major European low-cost airline, scored 3 out of 6 on value metrics, with concerns over capacity, costs, and demand resilience influencing its valuation. The report also notes Ryanair's recent 2.7% yearly return lags peers, underscoring cautious investor appraisal amid sector challenges.

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