If it’s adequate for the bonnie banks o’ Loch Lomond, it’s adequate for Wall Road—at the least with regards to the greenback’s tug-of-war with gold and silver.
Gold and silver typically values sometimes have an inverse relationship with the worth of the greenback. When the buck takes the excessive street, the 2 valuable metals are inclined to take the low street—and vice versa.
Gold is at the moment buying and selling at $5,383.90 per ounce and silver at $115.42 per ounce, each at historic highs, whereas the U.S. greenback has weakened to its lowest stage in roughly 4 years.
All three got here up through the January 28 version of TheStreet Professional’s Shares & Markets Podcast with host Chris Versace and Bob Lang, market technician and TheStreet Professional contributor.
“In the short term, the dollar tends to have a lot of volatility around it,” Lang mentioned. “And that’s just normal machinations of the movement of currencies back and forth. When the dollar is weak, obviously the euro and the yen are stronger and vice versa. So, when the dollar peaked just a little after the election, it started to come down a little bit.”
“And that’s when we started seeing a little bit more energy coming into these precious metals,” he added. “And of course, if you’ve been watching the metals lately, they’ve gone parabolic, especially silver and gold.”
Gold and silver costs climbed as traders have looked for safe-haven property amid escalating geopolitical tensions, persistent inflation, and market sentiment.
TheStreet Professional’s Bob Lang says gold’s rise has been parabolic.
Gold surge is historic, skilled says
Industrial demand, notably for photo voltaic panels and electrical automobiles, helps drive silver increased, alongside heavy investor shopping for and a good provide.”
“Short-term, there’s a lot of volatility and a lot of big movements up and down,” Lang mentioned. “But on the long-term horizon, I think the dollar is stable. It’s strong.”
Extra on gold:
- Market uncertainty resets silver, gold bets
- Billionaire Dalio sends 2-word warning on markets
- Each main analyst’s gold worth forecast for 2026
“But wouldn’t the President want to see a bit of a weaker dollar, kind of makes the U.S. goods more competitive in overseas markets?” Versace requested.
“Sure, but over a long period of time, Chris, you don’t want to see a weak currency,” Lang replied. “It tells you a lot about your economy; over the long term, a strong dollar is what you want.”
Lang famous that economist and TV commentator Larry Kudlow, who served because the Director of the Nationwide Financial Council below President Donald Trump from 2018 to 2021, desires the greenback to be the primary forex on the earth.
“And why not?” Lang mentioned. “We are the reserve forex of the world. The greenback must be the strongest forex on the market, and folks must be jealous that we now have the strongest forex. “So, I do think that over a long period of time, it tells you a lot about your economy and tells you a lot about your society. “
“And the strength of the dollar gives us much more buying power elsewhere in the world.”
He added that a weaker dollar brings inflation, “so we have to be careful about how much weakness we have in the currency.”
Regarding gold, Lang stressed that the current parabolic surge is historic.
“We haven’t seen anything like this, not even back in the late ’70s, Chris, when gold hit those all-time highs of like $808 an ounce and came back down and spent like a decade and a half in the $200 range,” he said.
Analyst advises buyer beware
“People kept saying it was going to hit $5,000,” Lang continued. “They’d been saying that for 15 to 20 years, and finally it got there—and I think it surprised the heck out of everybody this past week.”
Versace said he was concerned about the individual investor during this volatile period.
Related: Major bank revamps gold price target for 2026
“We get these very ‘clickbaity’ headlines that really try to suck people in,” he said. “And it can pull people into investments that may have had significant runs. Maybe they’re getting a little frothy. At the same time, we’re also seeing other clickbaity headlines that I think cause worry.”
Lang agreed, noting that in this social media age, “there’s just too much misinformation and disinformation out there and deception out there.”
“And I think people are, to a certain extent, using AI models to try and create some interest and create some controversy and some confusion,” he said. “A lot of confusion out there. You see a lot of it out there every single day. And I think that that’s a problem.”
He advised investors to follow the mantra, “caveat emptor”—let the buyer beware.
“You’ve got to be careful,” he said. “It’s very easy to get enthusiastic and excited when you see some of these things racing higher, like gold and silver. Go back to the 1840s when they had the California Gold Rush. Everybody and their mother were going over there when they heard everybody was mining gold.”
“We’re in 2026, and it’s no different today than it was 180 years ago.”
Associated: Shares & Markets Podcast: Powell, Trump and the combat over Fed independence
