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. Gold futures are overbought, silver is severely overbought, and Bitcoin is deeply oversold, signaling potential short-term reversals. Investors are turning to precious metals as a hedge against macroeconomic uncertainty, with industrial demand for silver in renewable energy, artificial intelligence, and photovoltaics amplifying its rally—up over 60% so far in 2026, reaching about $118 per ounce, a 22% increase over gold.
Clear Divergence Between Silver, Gold, and Bitcoin
Analysts point out that gold ETF inflows surged significantly in Q4 2025, with total inflows approaching $60 billion by year-end. They also add that most silver ETF inflows occurred in the same quarter, coinciding with outflows from Bitcoin ETFs, indicating retail investors are shifting from Bitcoin to precious metals.
Analysts believe that institutional behavior has reinforced this shift. Using changes in CME futures open interest as a proxy, data shows that from Q4 2025 to early 2026, silver long positions increased substantially, mainly driven by hedge funds. Over most of the past year, gold futures also experienced similar growth in holdings.
In contrast, analysts say Bitcoin futures positions have not seen similar growth over the past year.
Using momentum indicators to gauge trend-following traders (like commodity trading advisors), the results show a clear divergence among the three assets. Analysts note that gold futures are overbought, silver futures are currently severely overbought, and Bitcoin futures are oversold. They add that this positioning increases the risk of recent profit-taking or mean reversion in gold and silver.
In fact, both silver and gold prices have recently retreated from their highs.
Analysts also highlight structural differences in liquidity among these assets using the Hui-Heubel ratio (a measure of market breadth and liquidity). Gold’s ratio has remained consistently lower, indicating stronger liquidity and higher market participation. Silver’s ratio is higher, reflecting weaker liquidity. Analysts say the recent decline in silver market breadth may have contributed to recent price volatility. Bitcoin’s Hui-Heubel ratio is the highest among the three, indicating lower liquidity and greater sensitivity to smaller order flows.
Despite short-term risks for precious metals, analysts remain optimistic about gold’s long-term prospects. They state that both private investors and central banks continue to increase their allocations to gold.
JPMorgan Maintains Optimism for Gold’s Long-Term Outlook
JPMorgan expects gold prices could reach $8,000 to $8,500 per ounce in the coming years, supported by central bank diversification, currency depreciation concerns, and ongoing demand in Asia. Additionally, analysts reaffirm that if investors continue to replace long-term bonds with gold as a hedge against stocks, the allocation of private investors to gold could rise from just over 3% currently to about 4.6%. Under this scenario, they believe the theoretical range for gold prices could reach $8,000 to $8,500 per ounce.
However, cautious sentiment is widespread: former JPMorgan analysts and companies like Société Générale warn that the precious metals market is severely overbought, mainly driven by speculation fueled by “FOMO” rather than fundamentals. Silver is called the “Cinderella” of metals, with a 50% risk of collapse within a year due to high prices potentially being alleviated by increased supply to address shortages.
The poor performance of Bitcoin highlights its dilemma as “digital gold,” with the Bitcoin-to-silver ratio dropping to 700-800, a level historically indicating Bitcoin oversold or silver overbought. While institutions stabilize prices by holding Bitcoin, it lacks the five-thousand-year consensus and central bank appeal that gold has. Traders are watching for a rebound from oversold levels, but amid global volatility, precious metals still dominate.