Today: 12 July 2026
Gold, silver extend historic plunge as margin calls spread after Trump’s Fed pick
12 July 2026
2 mins read

Gold, Silver Week Ahead: Why a Hormuz Shock May Hurt Bullion Before It Helps

London, July 12, 2026, 18:28 (BST)

With bullion markets closed for the weekend, gold and silver are set to reopen in Asian trade on Monday into a fresh escalation around the Strait of Hormuz. But the first response may again be higher oil and rate expectations rather than a clean safe-haven bid: Iran said the waterway was closed, while U.S. Central Command said traffic was flowing after heavy strikes on Sunday.

The Friday tape showed why. Bullion fell as energy rose, while CME Group’s FedWatch tool put the chance of a September rate rise at about 69%; “Every indication points toward the market worrying about inflation,” said Bart Melek, global head of commodity strategy at TD Securities, part of Toronto-Dominion Bank .

Asset or listed proxyFriday level/lastFriday moveWeekly move
Spot gold$4,103.23 an ounce-0.4%-1.7%
Spot silver$59.56 an ounce-0.7%
WTI crude$71.41 a barrel-0.9%Nearly +4.0%
Gold/silver ratio68.9 times
SPDR Gold Shares (NYSEARCA:GLD)$377.01About -0.3%
iShares Silver Trust $53.95About -0.3%
Newmont $95.29About +0.5%
Pan American Silver $43.67About -1.0%

The ratio is calculated from the quoted spot prices; equity figures are Friday’s latest U.S. trades.

Gold is non-yielding—it pays no interest—so higher expected policy rates raise the cost of holding it instead of cash or bonds. The mixed miner moves also warn against treating shares as pure bullion: Newmont rose while Pan American fell, even as both metal funds slipped. The market is trading the conflict’s inflation impact more forcefully than its geopolitical label.

The less-covered risk sits in futures positioning. Managed money—hedge funds and other professional money managers—entered the week with gold exposure about 2.5 times as crowded as silver. A net long means long contracts minus short ones; open interest is the total number of outstanding contracts.

CFTC managed-money position, July 7GoldSilver
Net long, contracts116,16113,201
Net long as share of open interest31.2%12.6%
Change from June 30-3.3%-4.2%

Both positions were cut, but gold’s 31.2% reading leaves more room for liquidation if inflation data lift yields. The percentages are calculations from U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission data.

Physical trade points the other way. In India, the basis—the local premium or discount to the global benchmark—was a discount of up to $19 an ounce for gold, about 0.5% of Friday spot, against a $6.50 silver premium, about 10.9%. “Silver imports have nearly come to a halt,” said Chirag Thakkar, chief executive of Amrapali Group Gujarat; May imports fell to 46.8 metric tons from 534.3 tons a year earlier, leaving dealers heavily reliant on Hindustan Zinc , the country’s biggest silver producer. Reuters

Gold’s physical cushion is in China, not India. The People’s Bank of China added 480,000 ounces in June, extending its buying streak to 20 months, while Indian dealers offered wide discounts as retail demand slowed. Bernard Sin, regional director for Greater China at MKS PAMP, said the central bank’s “counter-cyclical buying is helping stabilize prices.” Reuters

The macro test arrives quickly.

Date and time, ETEventBullion read-through
Tuesday, July 14, 08:30U.S. June CPITests whether consumer inflation is easing
Tuesday, July 14, 10:00Fed Chair Kevin Warsh before House committeeFirst signal on whether rate-hike pricing is justified
Wednesday, July 15, 08:30U.S. June PPIMeasures price pressure faced by producers
Wednesday, July 15, 10:00Warsh before Senate committeeChecks whether Tuesday’s message changes under questioning

Core CPI, which excludes volatile food and energy prices, will be watched for evidence that higher fuel costs are spreading through the wider economy.

A softer CPI, provided oil does not gap higher, would probably lower rate-hike odds and support gold first; silver could then catch up through a weaker dollar. A higher-than-expected reading or a hawkish Warsh would test the crowded gold long. “If inflation doesn’t come down, rates could go up,” said Michael Feroli, chief U.S. economist at JPMorgan Chase , summing up the policy split. Reuters

But the rates-first playbook could fail. A verified shipping stoppage or strike on energy infrastructure could trigger a sharp safe-haven opening jump before inflation expectations catch up; rapid de-escalation paired with inflation that stays high would do the reverse, removing the fear bid without lowering yields. The durable signal is whether gold can rise alongside crude: if it cannot, bullion is still trading more like a rate asset than insurance, while silver remains the less crowded, more physically distorted trade.

Jerzy Lewandowski is a senior markets editor at TS2.tech covering stocks, artificial intelligence, semiconductors and global financial markets. He studied economics at the University of Warsaw and previously worked in investment analysis before moving into financial journalism. His daily coverage focuses on the trends and events that matter most to investors worldwide.

Stock Market Today

  • Plug Power (PLUG) Sinks 15.5% as Questions Swirl on 50 MW Australia Deal
    July 12, 2026, 1:12 PM EDT. Plug Power shares tumbled 15.53% after the company announced a 50-megawatt electrolyzer order from Australia but didn't spell out the financial details or timing. The lack of contract value and delivery window knocked about $570 million off Plug's market cap, with the stock closing at $2.23 for a total value near $3.1 billion. The order makes up a sixth of Plug's total electrolyzer capacity. Traders bailed from peer names too as FuelCell Energy and Ballard Power fell, while the Nasdaq Composite rose 1.7%. Susquehanna slashed its Plug price target to $2.50 and kept a Neutral rating, Morgan Stanley stuck with Underweight but bumped its target up to $1.65. Plug is still burning cash, even with 22% sales growth and improving margins, showing a $245 million loss last quarter and $223 million cash on hand.
Oil Price Forecast This Week: Brent’s 6% Slide Leaves Traders Staring at $120 Risk
Previous Story

Oil Week: Diesel Premium Nears $80, Brent Sees Fresh Monday Gap

Go toTop