Key Takeaways
- Gold and silver are on track for their strongest annual gains since 1979, powered by demand for safe-haven assets amid tariff turmoil, falling interest rates, and major buying by central banks.
- Copper’s record run reflects surging demand worldwide from EV, AI infrastructure, and renewable energy construction projects.
Investors continue to buy up metals, driving the prices of gold and silver to new highs.
Gold hit $4,460 per ounce Monday, an all-time high in a year that’s already seen it surpass its 1980 inflation-adjusted peak. Silver has more than doubled in price. Copper, the metal wiring data centers and EVs, is approaching $12,000 per ton in its biggest annual surge since 2009.
Why This Matters To You
For investors, the metals rally signals persistent fears over inflation and economic uncertainty, as well as a massive infrastructure buildout that’s just getting started. You may already be feeling these price surges, whether through higher jewelry costs, pricier electronics, or rising home renovation bills.
Why These Metals Are Surging
Rate-cut expectations, a weakening dollar, and geopolitical anxiety are fueling these rallies. The dollar is on pace for its steepest annual decline since 2017, making gold cheaper for overseas buyers and spawning enthusiasm for what’s known as the “debasement trade,” in which investors see metals as a hedge against rising government debt.
Central banks are also building their gold stockpiles, expanding physical holdings to cut their reliance on the dollar and hedge against economic turbulence.
The expectation of rate cuts, meanwhile, generally supports gold, which doesn’t pay a dividend and thus can look more attractive by comparison when rates are lower. (Practically speaking, there’s disagreement among experts about how many cuts, if any, the Fed might make in 2026.)
Silver has surged 137% this year, its best performance since 1982. That’s because of the metal’s dual roles as a store of value and for industrial uses: Demand from companies that make solar panels, EVs, and data centers have helped propel silver prices higher.
Copper is up 36.7% this year, approaching $12,000 per ton, its biggest annual gain since 2009. The metal is rising because of the massive need for it in AI data center, EV, and expanding power grid construction.
Related Education
Grid and power infrastructure are projected to drive more than 60% of copper demand growth through 2030, according to Goldman Sachs. Every new solar farm, wind turbine, and data center project is adding to the demand. Meanwhile, a single electric car uses up to four times more copper than a gas-powered vehicle.
Copper suppliers haven’t been able to keep up. Disruptions to mining operations in Chile and Peru have dented production, and the White House slapped a 50% tariff on imported copper products this year, sparking a hoarding rush that J.P. Morgan expects to continue in 2026.