Precious metals are rallying again, with silver stealing the spotlight while gold regains its shine, and investors are starting to ask if cryptocurrenciesPrecious metals are rallying again, with silver stealing the spotlight while gold regains its shine, and investors are starting to ask if cryptocurrencies

Silver Booms to New Highs, 100% Up YoY — Is a Crypto Breakout Coming Too?

Precious metals are rallying again, with silver stealing the spotlight while gold regains its shine, and investors are starting to ask if cryptocurrencies could be next.

Key Takeaways:

  • Silver has doubled this year on rate-cut bets, a weaker dollar, and rising industrial demand.
  • Bitcoin is down over 30% from its peak as crypto markets suffer their sharpest pullback since 2022.
  • ETF outflows and on-chain losses show stress in crypto, even as metals draw fresh investor interest.

Gold climbed to its highest level in six weeks on Monday as investors increased bets on a US interest-rate cut, pushing spot prices above $4,240 an ounce.

Silver jumped even harder, touching a record near $57.86 before easing slightly, and is now up more than 100% this year.

Rate-Cut Bets and Weak Dollar Fuel Silver’s Record Run

The move comes as markets reprice expectations for looser monetary policy. Recent soft US data and dovish remarks from policymakers have fueled anticipation that the Federal Reserve could trim rates as soon as this month.

Futures markets now imply a high probability of a cut, and the dollar has slipped to a two-week low, making metals cheaper for overseas buyers.

Analysts also point to stronger industrial demand as a tailwind for silver, alongside its traditional role as a hedge when confidence in paper assets fades.

While metals surge, crypto is wrestling with a very different mood.

Bitcoin has shed more than 30% from its October peak near $126,000 and now trades around $86,000, Linh Tran, Market Analyst at XS.com, said in a comment.

November alone delivered a double-digit slide, capping the worst late-year performance since the 2022 bear market.

In the past six weeks, the wider crypto market has lost about $1 trillion in value, with Bitcoin accounting for over $400 billion of that decline.

Institutional flows tell a similar story. US spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded roughly $3.5 billion in net outflows in November, the heaviest monthly withdrawal since approvals early last year.

Investors have used the vehicles as a quick exit as macro risk rises, reversing the pattern that once amplified upside during the rally.

Signs of stress also appear on-chain, where realized losses among short-term holders have spiked to levels last seen in late 2022, a signal of capitulation by late entrants and leveraged traders.

Bitcoin ETF Outflows Ease as Institutional Base Holds Firm

Still, there are hints that the bleeding may be slowing, Tran said. Late in November, ETFs registered a modest return to net inflows, adding about $70 million.

While small relative to earlier exits, the shift suggests selling pressure could be exhausting itself.

Cumulatively, ETFs still hold close to $120 billion in Bitcoin, around 6.5% of the network’s market value, indicating that the long-term institutional footprint remains intact.

So does silver’s breakout foreshadow a crypto rebound? Historically, easier money lifts all risk assets, but timing matters.

Metals often move first when rate expectations change. Digital assets tend to follow once liquidity actually turns.

For now, Bitcoin appears locked in a volatile range between $80,000 and $90,000, with the risk of a deeper test toward $70,000 if macro conditions sour again.

“In the medium and long term, if the Fed begins to signal clearer monetary easing, macro risks ease, and ETF flows shift from net outflows to neutral or net inflows, Bitcoin will have the runway to establish a new upward cycle,” Tran said.

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