26 September 2025
5 mins read

Gold Nears $3,800, Silver Tops $46: 10 Forces Supercharging Precious Metals Today (Sept 26, 2025)

Gold Nears $3,800, Silver Tops $46: 10 Forces Supercharging Precious Metals Today (Sept 26, 2025)

Key facts (Sept 26, 2025)

  • Spot gold traded around $3,778/oz early afternoon New York time, up ~0.8% on the day and ~2.5% on the week after August PCE inflation matched forecasts. Silver hovered near $46.4/oz, at a 14‑year high[1]
  • This week’s highs: Gold set a fresh all‑time intraday record ~$3,791 on Tuesday; silver first hit $45 on Thursday—its highest since 2011.  [2]
  • Macro catalyst: Core PCE ran ~2.9% y/y in August (in line), keeping rate‑cut odds for October high (CME FedWatch ≈88%). Next FOMC is Oct 28–29[3]
  • Policy shock: A new U.S. tariff package (100% on patented drugs; 25% on heavy trucks; other sector levies) announced this week added safe‑haven bid.  [4]
  • Asia’s physical market: China dealers widened discounts to $31–$71/oz vs global prices; India showed premiums up to $7/oz and record‑high local prices ahead of festivals.  [5]
  • Drivers of the 2025 rally: Heavy central‑bank buying (annual totals above 1,000 tonnes since 2022) and a revival of ETF inflows in H1.  [6]
  • Silver’s fundamentals: The Silver Institute still sees a sizeable 2025 market deficit (~149 Moz) alongside record industrial demand, led by solar.  [7]
  • Vault signals: LBMA London silver holdings stood at ~24,646 tonnes at end‑August; gold 8,831 tonnes—useful context for physical liquidity.  [8]
  • Gold‑silver ratio (GSR): Around ~81 today (gold ≈$3,778 / silver ≈$46.4), down from the mid‑80s earlier in September—supportive for silver’s catch‑up.  [9]
  • Street views: UBS now targets $3,800 by end‑2025 (and $3,900 by mid‑2026); Goldman says >$4,000 is plausible if investor demand accelerates.  [10]

In‑depth report

Where prices stand right now

Gold firmed after August PCE landed near consensus, reinforcing odds of further Fed easing. Spot gold traded near $3,778/oz by 1:30 p.m. ET; December futures settled around $3,809Silver gained to ~$46.4/oz, a 14‑year high.  [11]

“Monthly PCE data is in line… Nothing from this data will prevent the Fed from carrying on with another cautious rate cut at the October meeting,” said Tai Wong[12]

What moved metals this week (Sept 22–26)

  • Mon–Tue: Gold broke to fresh records, touching ~$3,791 Tuesday as bets solidified for continued Fed easing; silver pushed through $44[13]
  • Wed: A dollar bounce and profit‑taking knocked gold off the high, but prices stayed near records.  [14]
  • Thu: Silver stole the headlines—>$45 for the first time since 2011—as risk hedging intensified.  [15]
  • Fri: PCE landed near forecasts; gold rebounded and silver stayed elevated[16]

Macro backdrop: rates, inflation and tariffs

The core PCE inflation gauge is running around 2.9% y/y, close to expectations and below 2022 peaks, keeping alive the case for additional Fed “risk‑management” cuts. Market‑implied odds show ~88% probability of an October cut; the FOMC meets Oct 28–29[17]

Newly announced U.S. tariffs (100% on some branded drugs, 25% on heavy trucks, plus furniture and other items) added policy uncertainty and safe‑haven demand for gold and silver.  [18]

Physical markets: East–West divergence

  • China: With international prices at records, retail demand softened and local discounts widened to $31–$71/oz—a multi‑year low for onshore appetite.  [19]
  • India: Buyers paid up to $7/oz premiums over official prices, with domestic gold around ₹112,500/10g and silver hitting record rupee highs into festival season. Imports of silver, after slumping in H1, re‑accelerated in recent weeks.  [20]

Investment & central‑bank demand

The 2025 surge has been powered by central banks and a return of ETF interest. Central‑bank purchases have exceeded 1,000 tonnes/year since 2022 as reserve managers diversify away from the dollar; H1 saw the largest ETF inflows since 2020[21]

UBS raised its year‑end 2025 gold target to $3,800, writing: “We maintain an Attractive view on gold and stay long.”  [22]
Goldman Sachs argues prices could surpass $4,000 by mid‑2026 if private investors rotate more aggressively into bullion.  [23]

Silver’s unique setup: deficit + solar + substitution

Metals Focus, via the Silver Institute, expects another sizeable market deficit in 2025 (~149 Moz) and record industrial demand, led by photovoltaics (PV), autos and electronics.  [24]

At the same time, PV manufacturers are thrifting silver loads to manage costs. As Philip Newman of Metals Focus told pv magazine: “It’s quite possible that we may see the $50 threshold being exceeded next year,” which would push PV makers to further reduce silver loads[25]

Vaults & liquidity: As of end‑AugustLBMA London held ~24,646 tonnes of silver and 8,831 tonnes of gold—a snapshot of available liquidity in the world’s key OTC hub.  [26]

The gold–silver ratio (GSR) is swinging toward silver

Using today’s spot levels, the GSR sits near ~81, down from ~86 earlier in September and below its five‑year average (~82)—a relative tailwind for silver if the trend persists.  [27]

Expert voices to watch

  • Tai Wong (metals trader): “Nothing… will prevent the Fed from carrying on with another cautious rate cut in October.”  [28]
  • Nicholas Frappell (ABC Refinery): A 5–6% correction is possible before $4,000 in 2026.  [29]
  • UBS (strategy note): “Attractive view on gold… mid‑single‑digit allocation optimal.”  [30]
  • Philip Newman (Metals Focus): Silver >$50 next year is “quite possible”; PV manufacturers likely to thrift more silver.  [31]

Short‑term scenarios (next 1–3 months)

Bullish path

  • Fed delivers another cut in late October; real yields ease; gold retests $3,800–3,900silver probes $48–50Tariff uncertainty and geopolitical risks persist.  [32]
  • Continued central‑bank buying and ETF inflows extend the uptrend.  [33]

Sideways/consolidation

  • dollar or yield bounce after strong U.S. data tempers momentum; gold ranges $3,650–3,820, silver $44–47ahead of FOMC.  [34]

Bearish near‑term risk

  • Hotter‑than‑expected data or Fed pushback lifts real rates, triggering a 5–8% pullback, consistent with analysts’ warnings about an overbought tape.  [35]

What to watch next

  • FOMC (Oct 28–29): Statement, SEP projections and Powell presser—key for real‑rate trajectory.  [36]
  • U.S. data flow: ISM, JOLTS, jobless claims, and the next PCE print. (Today’s PCE was in line.)  [37]
  • Tariff implementation and trade frictions—any expansion beyond this week’s measures could bolster safe‑haven flows.  [38]
  • Physical premiums/discounts in China & India for signs of demand elasticity at record prices.  [39]
  • LBMA vault updates (monthly) and ETF holdings for confirmation of investment demand.  [40]

Forecasts & house views roundup (late‑Sept 2025)

  • UBS: $3,800 end‑2025; $3,900 mid‑2026 (still Attractive on gold).  [41]
  • Goldman Sachs: Baseline $3,700 2025$4,000 mid‑2026$4,500 scenario if private investors rotate.  [42]
  • Consensus tone in industry forums: Uptrend intact but prone to tactical corrections before higher highs in 2026.  [43]

Practical takeaways (public audience)

  1. Volatility is normal at records. Position sizes and risk controls matter more than usual as markets digest policy, inflation and trade headlines. (See today’s PCE and tariff context.)  [44]
  2. Diversification case remains intact while real rates drift lower and central banks keep buying.  [45]
  3. Silver’s torque cuts both ways. Deficits and PV demand help, but thrifting can blunt price spikes; expect larger swings than gold.  [46]

Sources & further reading (Sept 22–26, 2025)

  • Daily/weekly price & drivers: Reuters metals wrap on Sept 26; gold record highs Sept 22, 24; silver’s 14‑year high.  [47]
  • Silver hits $45: Bloomberg via Yahoo Finance.  [48]
  • Asia physical flows: China discounts and India premiums.  [49]
  • PCE inflation: Reuters explainer and live update.  [50]
  • Tariffs (policy shock): Reuters tariffs coverage and electronics‑tariff proposal.  [51]
  • Central‑bank & ETF demand: Reuters explainer on who is buying gold.  [52]
  • LBMA vault data: August 2025 holdings—gold & silver.  [53]
  • Silver fundamentals & outlook: Silver Institute 2025 deficit/record industrial demand; PV thrifting & $50 risk.  [54]
  • Street forecasts: UBS & Goldman Sachs notes.  [55]

Note: Spot prices vary by venue and timestamp. Figures above reflect widely cited benchmarks and intraday quotes reported by major outlets on Sept 26, 2025. For official benchmarks (London AM/PM and LBMA Silver Price), refer to LBMA publications and licensed data vendors. 

11 Tips For Stacking Silver and Gold

References

1. www.reuters.com, 2. www.reuters.com, 3. www.reuters.com, 4. www.reuters.com, 5. www.reuters.com, 6. www.reuters.com, 7. silverinstitute.org, 8. www.lbma.org.uk, 9. www.reuters.com, 10. www.reuters.com, 11. www.reuters.com, 12. www.reuters.com, 13. www.reuters.com, 14. www.reuters.com, 15. finance.yahoo.com, 16. www.reuters.com, 17. www.reuters.com, 18. www.reuters.com, 19. www.reuters.com, 20. www.reuters.com, 21. www.reuters.com, 22. www.reuters.com, 23. www.reuters.com, 24. silverinstitute.org, 25. pv-magazine-usa.com, 26. www.lbma.org.uk, 27. www.reuters.com, 28. www.reuters.com, 29. www.reuters.com, 30. www.reuters.com, 31. pv-magazine-usa.com, 32. www.federalreserve.gov, 33. www.reuters.com, 34. www.barrons.com, 35. www.reuters.com, 36. www.federalreserve.gov, 37. www.reuters.com, 38. www.reuters.com, 39. www.reuters.com, 40. www.lbma.org.uk, 41. www.reuters.com, 42. www.reuters.com, 43. www.reuters.com, 44. www.reuters.com, 45. www.reuters.com, 46. silverinstitute.org, 47. www.reuters.com, 48. finance.yahoo.com, 49. www.reuters.com, 50. www.reuters.com, 51. www.reuters.com, 52. www.reuters.com, 53. www.lbma.org.uk, 54. silverinstitute.org, 55. www.reuters.com

Spectrum Meltdown Freezes North Texas: Thousands Offline in Dallas—What Happened, How It Compares, and How to Stay Online
Previous Story

Spectrum Meltdown Freezes North Texas: Thousands Offline in Dallas—What Happened, How It Compares, and How to Stay Online

Ghost of Yōtei Review Bombshell: Is PlayStation’s New Samurai Epic a Masterpiece—or Just More of the Same?
Next Story

Ghost of Yōtei Review Bombshell: Is PlayStation’s New Samurai Epic a Masterpiece—or Just More of the Same?

Go toTop