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Silver's remarkable ascent at the start of the year continues to fade into memory, with the metal falling below $64 an ounce on Wednesday, its lowest level since March and a far cry from the historic highs witnessed just five months ago. The latest decline leaves silver down more than 15% in June alone, extending a sharp correction that has steadily eroded one of the strongest rallies seen in the precious metals market in recent years. The magnitude of the reversal is hard to ignore. After surging to a historic peak near $120 an ounce in late January, silver has now surrendered almost half of its value in less than five months. The metal's meteoric rise earlier this year has given way to a sharp and unforgiving correction, highlighting just how quickly market sentiment can shift when macroeconomic headwinds begin to intensify. Silver's slump has outpaced losses across the broader precious metals space. While gold has retreated around 6% since the start of June, silver has declined by more than 15%, reflecting its heightened sensitivity to changing interest-rate expectations and risk sentiment. Both metals are now languishing at their lowest levels in nearly three months, erasing a substantial portion of the gains accumulated during their record-breaking run. Geopolitical tensions surrounding the Iran conflict have done little to revive safe-haven demand. Instead, investors remain focused on the prospect of tighter monetary policy. Stronger-than-expected US jobs data has strengthened expectations that the Federal Reserve could raise interest rates again before year-end, while the ECB and the BOJ are also expected to move toward tighter policy later this month. With fresh US inflation data now in focus, silver finds itself at a pivotal crossroads. For a market that was celebrating record highs just months ago, the narrative has shifted dramatically. For now, the market's focus remains firmly on interest rates, leaving the metal struggling to regain the momentum that propelled it to record-breaking highs earlier this year. Powered by Capital Market - Live News
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