After A Dismal 2021, Gold And Silver Could Be Ready To Break Out

 | Jan 21, 2022 11:07

This article was written exclusively for Investing.com

  • Gold and silver bulls disappointed in 2021
  • Long-term bull markets
  • The case for gold in 2022
  • Silver likely to follow and magnify gold’s price action
  • The worst sectors during one period often outperform the next

The last time excitement overwhelmed the gold market was in August 2020, when the price of gold rose to $2,063 per ounce. Silver, the more volatile precious metal that many market participants call 'gold’s little brother,' rose to the highest price since 2013 in early 2021, when it probed above the $30-per-ounce level. Since then, gold and silver prices have declined and traded in tight ranges. The price action in the top precious metals has been like watching paint dry.

Gold and silver are supposed to be the ultimate inflation barometers, but they did not reflect the rise in the Consumer Price Index in 2021, when it hit an almost four-decade high. Gold has been trading around a pivot point of $1,800 per ounce over the past months, and silver has sat in a range between just below $21.50 and just above $25 per ounce over the past six months.

While most commodities posted impressive gains in 2021, gold and silver prices declined. Even though gold reached an all-time high in 2020 and silver rose to an eight-year peak in 2021, market participants desire immediate gratification. Gold and silver prices are much closer to this century’s highs than the lows, but they did not perform as well as other commodities in 2021. 2022 could be a different story for precious metals.

h2 Disappointment For Gold And Silver Bulls In 2021/h2

Last year, gold and silver bulls had high hopes that higher highs were on the horizon. However, the price action did not offer many opportunities.