Gold set for best year in nearly half a century, silver heads for largest annual gain

Gold was steady on Wednesday but remained on track for its strongest annual gain in over four decades, while other precious metals fell sharply as investors booked profits after a strong, record-setting rally.

Spot gold was steady at $4,345.75 per ounce as of 0404 GMT after hitting a record high of $4,549.71 on Friday.

US gold futures for February delivery lost 0.5% to $4,365.0/oz. Bullion has climbed 66% in 2025, marking its largest annual gain since 1979 when prices were driven higher by geopolitical factors, including the Iranian revolution.

Gold’s rally has been driven by interest rate cuts and bets of further easing by the US Federal Reserve, geopolitical conflicts, robust demand from central banks and rising holdings in exchange-traded funds.

However, analysts said that recent declines in precious metals were linked to technical factors alongside thin trading.

“CME announced an increase in margins on metals futures and that was a very painful adjustment for (precious metals on Monday), it seems we have very thin markets here with the holidays,” Ilya Spivak, head of global macro at Tastylive, said.

The US dollar rose to a more than one-week high, making greenback-priced bullion more expensive for other currency holders.

Minutes from the Fed’s December meeting showed policymakers agreed to cut interest rates only after a deeply nuanced debate, though traders expect two more reductions next year.

Low interest rate environments typically support non-yielding assets such as gold.

“Maybe towards the end of the first (quarter of 2026), we could see (gold) test $5,000. Certainly, it seems like the sort of catalysts animating gold, especially over the course of the past year, have become self-sustaining,” Spivak said.

Spot silver fell 4.5% to $73.06 per ounce on Wednesday after hitting an all-time high of $83.62 on Monday.

Silver has gained over 150% year-to-date, far outpacing gold, and is set for its best year ever. The metal broke multiple milestones in 2025, supported by its designation as a critical U.S. mineral, supply constraints, low inventories and rising industrial and investment demand. With the Dow, S&P 500 and Nasdaq all ticking down between a tenth and a quarter of a percent.

Spot platinum shed 6.1% to $2,065.80 per ounce after rising to a lifetime high of $2,478.50 on Monday. It is up over 120% for the year, its strongest gain ever. Palladium fell 7.1% to $1,496.75 per ounce, set to close the year up 65%, its best performance in 15 years.

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