• Latest
  • Trending
  • All
  • Gold
  • Gold Market News
  • Gold Price Movements
  • Gold Charts
  • Other Markets
  • Silver
brent-stays-near-$70-as-russian-discounts-cap-upside-risk-|-investing.com

Brent Stays Near $70 as Russian Discounts Cap Upside Risk | Investing.com

February 18, 2026
Retail Sales Suggest Consumer Strength Is Less Impressive in Real Terms

Retail Sales Suggest Consumer Strength Is Less Impressive in Real Terms

April 30, 2026
Silver Nears Key $78.55–$77.06 Accumulation Zone as Cycle Pressure Builds

Silver Nears Key $78.55–$77.06 Accumulation Zone as Cycle Pressure Builds

April 30, 2026
Gold Holds Above $4,800, but Resistance Limits Breakout

Gold Holds Above $4,800, but Resistance Limits Breakout

April 30, 2026
S&P 500 Faces Questions as Rapid V-Shaped Rallies Accelerate

S&P 500 Faces Questions as Rapid V-Shaped Rallies Accelerate

April 30, 2026
Gold Faces Selling Pressure as Oil Surge Signals Escalation Risk

Gold Faces Selling Pressure as Oil Surge Signals Escalation Risk

April 30, 2026
Gold Struggles Near Key Levels as Market Turns Cautious

Gold Struggles Near Key Levels as Market Turns Cautious

April 30, 2026
Gold: Range Compression Continues as Price Moves Within Neutral Zones

Gold: Range Compression Continues as Price Moves Within Neutral Zones

April 30, 2026
Gold Bulls Supported by Low Speculative Positioning Despite High Prices

Gold Bulls Supported by Low Speculative Positioning Despite High Prices

April 30, 2026
Brent Crude Drop Resets Oil Outlook and Eases Inflation Pressure

Brent Crude Drop Resets Oil Outlook and Eases Inflation Pressure

April 30, 2026
Stocks Rally as Oil Slides on Middle East Ceasefire Hopes, US Dollar Weakens

Stocks Rally as Oil Slides on Middle East Ceasefire Hopes, US Dollar Weakens

April 30, 2026

Gold: Friday’s Movement Raises Questions About the Sustainability of Fragile Deal | Investing.com

April 19, 2026
Uranium Sector Stayed ‘Normal’ Amid War Drama—Now Bull Market Momentum Returns

Uranium Sector Stayed ‘Normal’ Amid War Drama—Now Bull Market Momentum Returns

May 5, 2026
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact
Saturday, June 6, 2026
  • Login
Bullion Market
  • Home
  • Gold
    • All
    • Gold Charts
    • Gold Market Forecasts
    • Gold Market News
    • Gold Price Movements
    Gold Struggles Near Key Levels as Market Turns Cautious

    Gold Struggles Near Key Levels as Market Turns Cautious

    Gold Faces Double Blockade, Risks Sliding Despite Strong Oil Support

    Gold Faces Double Blockade, Risks Sliding Despite Strong Oil Support

    Gold Prices Face Pause as Traders Lock in Gains After Sell Targets

    Gold Prices Face Pause as Traders Lock in Gains After Sell Targets

    Gold Rallies Toward 3-Week High: Trading Setups Amid Geopolitical Calm

    Gold Rallies Toward 3-Week High: Trading Setups Amid Geopolitical Calm

    Gold Extends Decline as Bearish Momentum Builds Below Key Levels

    Gold Extends Decline as Bearish Momentum Builds Below Key Levels

    Gold: Lower Oil Prices and Weaker US Dollar Support Upside Move

    Gold: Lower Oil Prices and Weaker US Dollar Support Upside Move

    gold-and-silver:-elevated-energy-fear-revert-back-to-april-2025-levels-|-investing.com

    Gold And Silver: Elevated Energy Fear Revert Back to April 2025 Levels | Investing.com

    gold,-silver-face-breakdown-risk-below-key-support-as-yield-pressure-builds-|-investing.com

    Gold, Silver Face Breakdown Risk Below Key Support as Yield Pressure Builds | Investing.com

    gold-slips-as-central-banks-walk-a-tightrope-on-inflation-and-growth-|-investing.com

    Gold Slips as Central Banks Walk a Tightrope on Inflation and Growth | Investing.com

    gold:-oil-swings-and-hormuz-tensions-keep-futures-volatile-|-investing.com

    Gold: Oil Swings and Hormuz Tensions Keep Futures Volatile | Investing.com

    Trending Tags

    • Donald Trump
    • Future of News
    • Climate Change
    • Market Stories
    • Election Results
    • Flat Earth
  • Silver
    • All
    • Silver Market News
    • Silver Market Outlook
    Broadcom’s AI Momentum Could Be Far From Over Market Forecasts Gold

    Gold and Silver Face Pressure as Iran War Raises Stagflation Fears

    gold-faces-downside-risk-as-weekend-de-escalation-may-accelerate-selling-|-investing.com

    Gold Faces Downside Risk as Weekend De-Escalation May Accelerate Selling | Investing.com

    gold-and-silver-face-volatility-as-iran-conflict-fuels-market-uncertainty-|-investing.com

    Gold and Silver Face Volatility as Iran Conflict Fuels Market Uncertainty | Investing.com

    gold-vs-liquidity:-what-florida’s-legal-tender-move-really-means-|-investing.com

    Gold Vs. Liquidity: What Florida’s Legal Tender Move Really Means | Investing.com

    silver:-the-comex-won’t-default-but-china-is-ready-to-pounce-|-investing.com

    Silver: The Comex Won’t Default but China Is Ready To Pounce | Investing.com

    gold-and-silver:-technical-pressure-builds-as-upside-looks-capped-|-investing.com

    Gold and Silver: Technical Pressure Builds as Upside Looks Capped | Investing.com

    gold-and-silver:-diverging-spot-prices-and-the-potential-threat-of-inflation-|-investing.com

    Gold and Silver: Diverging Spot Prices and the Potential Threat of Inflation | Investing.com

    us-money-supply-and-gold:-a-balance-sheet-perspective-|-investing.com

    US Money Supply and Gold: A Balance Sheet Perspective | Investing.com

    Trending Tags

    • Flat Earth
    • Sillicon Valley
    • Mr. Robot
    • MotoGP 2017
    • Golden Globes
    • Future of News
  • Platinum & Palladium
    • All
    • Palladium Market News
    • Platinum Market News
    record-volatility-in-precious-metals-markets:-structured-note-strategies-|-investing.com

    Record Volatility in Precious Metals Markets: Structured Note Strategies | Investing.com

    gold-and-silver:-diverging-spot-prices-and-the-potential-threat-of-inflation-|-investing.com

    Gold and Silver: Diverging Spot Prices and the Potential Threat of Inflation | Investing.com

    us-money-supply-and-gold:-a-balance-sheet-perspective-|-investing.com

    US Money Supply and Gold: A Balance Sheet Perspective | Investing.com

    ptx-metals:-advancing-a-polymetallic-project-in-ontario,-canada,-towards-development

    PTX Metals: Advancing a Polymetallic Project in Ontario, Canada, Towards Development

    cupani-metals:-starting-to-explore-a-promising-copper-palladium-nickel-project-in-quebec-in-2026

    CUPANI Metals: Starting to Explore a Promising Copper-Palladium-Nickel Project in Quebec in 2026

  • Other Markets
    • All
    • Currency / Forex
    • Futures & Options
    USD/JPY Forecast: Japanese Yen Consolidation Masks Rising Intervention Risks

    USD/JPY Forecast: Japanese Yen Consolidation Masks Rising Intervention Risks

    US Dollar Strength Reflects Rate Surge More Than Safe Haven Demand

    US Dollar Strength Reflects Rate Surge More Than Safe Haven Demand

    GBP/USD Eyes Middle East: Details Matter to the Market

    GBP/USD Eyes Middle East: Details Matter to the Market

    USD/JPY Forecast: Japanese Yen Back Above 159 as Peace Talks Falter

    USD/JPY Forecast: Japanese Yen Back Above 159 as Peace Talks Falter

    US Dollar Strength Reflects Rates Spike More Than Safe Haven Demand

    US Dollar Strength Reflects Rates Spike More Than Safe Haven Demand

    AUD/NZD – 5th Wave Onboard

    AUD/NZD – 5th Wave Onboard

    Gold Out of Favor: All Eyes on Inflation Risks

    Gold Out of Favor: All Eyes on Inflation Risks

    AUD/JPY - Bears Still Have It

    AUD/JPY – Bears Still Have It

    FX Markets Stay on Edge as Trump Pause Fails to Build Confidence

    FX Markets Stay on Edge as Trump Pause Fails to Build Confidence

    Timing Is Everything in Forex Trading

    Timing Is Everything in Forex Trading

    Trending Tags

    • Golden Globes
    • Mr. Robot
    • MotoGP 2017
    • Climate Change
    • Flat Earth
  • Guide
    • Guide to Gold
      • How to Buy Gold
      • How to Invest in Gold
      • Investment Insurance
      • Compare Asset Performance
    • Guide to Silver
      • How to Buy Silver
      • Why Invest in Silver
    • Guide to Platinum
      • How to Buy Platinum
      • Platinum Investment
    • Guide to Palladium
No Result
View All Result
Bullion Market
No Result
View All Result
Home All Market

Brent Stays Near $70 as Russian Discounts Cap Upside Risk | Investing.com

by admin
February 18, 2026
in All Market
0
brent-stays-near-$70-as-russian-discounts-cap-upside-risk-|-investing.com

Brent Stays Near $70 as Russian Discounts Cap Upside Risk | Investing.com

491
SHARES
1.4k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Front-month WTI (CL=F) is trading in the low-$60s, with one snapshot showing $64.31 per barrel, up $1.98 on the day for a gain of roughly 3.2%. Brent (BZ=F) sits just below $70, around $69.44 per barrel, up $2.02 or about 3.0%. Those moves reverse much of the prior session’s drop, when Brent BZ=F slid to the high-$67s and WTI CL=F traded around $62.3–$62.5, marking more than two-week lows for both benchmarks.

The tape is behaving like a market caught between a macro fear trade and hard physical demand. On the one hand, futures spent Tuesday selling off on expectations that talks between Iran and United States could reduce the probability of a shooting conflict near the Gulf. On the other, prices snapped back as soon as traders were reminded that the same Iran temporarily restricted navigation through the Strait of Hormuz during naval drills, and political risk firms still assign around a two-thirds probability to a U.S. strike on Iranian assets by April.

The result: WTI CL=F and Brent BZ=F are trading inside a relatively tight band — low-$60s for WTI, high-$60s for Brent — but with intraday swings of 2–3% as sentiment lurches between de-escalation hopes and tail-risk hedging.

While paper markets react to headlines, the physical market in Asia is quietly putting in a new record. Total February crude imports into Asia are tracking around 28.51 million barrels per day, up from 27.48 mbpd in December and 26.22 mbpd in January. That is a new high in the dataset and a clear statement that refiners are running hard into early 2026.

The demand engine is dominated by China and India, but their sourcing patterns are diverging. China is buying more from both Russia and Saudi Arabia, with seaborne flows of Russian crude to Chinese refiners set to top 2.0 mbpd this month and estimates clustering around 2.07–2.08 mbpd. Lower Saudi official selling prices into Asia — cut to the weakest differential versus regional benchmarks in more than five years — are adding another incentive for Chinese refiners to lock in term volumes.

India is moving in the opposite direction. Russian barrels that once dominated its spot slate are being cut back under U.S. pressure and sanctions complexity. One key refinery at Jamnagar recorded a complete pause in seaborne Russian crude receipts in January, forcing a reshuffle toward Iraq, the Middle East more broadly, West Africa and the Americas. Imports of Saudi crude into India are projected to climb to around 1.03 mbpd in February, up sharply from roughly 774,000 bpd in January, the highest since late 2019.

For Brent BZ=F, the implication is straightforward: record Asian arrivals and deeper ties to both Russian and Middle Eastern streams tighten the market for seaborne light-sweet crude. For WTI CL=F, the signal is indirect but supportive. As international buyers pull in more Atlantic Basin and Middle Eastern cargoes, U.S. barrels become more relevant both as a marginal export flow and as the anchor to gasoline and distillate cracks. The gasoline benchmark itself is trading near $1.96 per gallon, up just over 2.2%, confirming that refined-product demand is not collapsing alongside AI-linked equity volatility.

A large part of the current Brent BZ=F structure is being driven by how effectively sanctions are — or are not — constraining Russian flows. Russian fossil fuel export revenues in January ran at about €464 million per day, the lowest since the full-scale invasion of Ukraine, and down about 3% month-on-month. Volumes fell faster than revenue, down about 6%, indicating a modest firming in average realized prices.

Within that total, crude oil brought in roughly €205 million per day, of which about €156 million per day came from seaborne crude and €49 million from pipelines. Oil products added another €107 million per day, pipeline gas about €59 million per day, LNG €39 million per day, and coal €54 million per day. This is not a collapsed export machine; it is an adjusted one. Russia is still exporting large volumes, but at a structurally enforced discount.

Urals crude averaged about $54.2 per barrel in January, a roughly 4% month-on-month increase but still trading around $9.85 per barrel below Brent BZ=F. That differential is wide enough to keep Indian, Chinese and Turkish refiners interested but narrow enough that revenues remain meaningful to the Kremlin. Crude price caps nominally sit lower — the updated cap is around $44.1 per barrel — yet Urals has traded above that level for most of the past year, highlighting how easily entity-based caps can be circumvented.

The logistics reinforce that point. In January, Russian seaborne oil exports actually rose about 19%. Roughly 49% of crude volumes were carried on so-called “shadow” tankers already under sanctions, another 24% on G7-linked tankers and 8% on non-sanctioned shadow vessels. For refined products, the dependence flips: around 76% of volumes move on G7-linked tankers, with only about 19% on sanctioned shadow ships.

That structure explains why WTI CL=F and Brent BZ=F are not trading at war-zone levels despite two active conflicts and repeated threats to infrastructure. Sanctions are cutting into Russian fiscal capacity — Urals at $54.2 versus Brent BZ=F close to $69 keeps a double-digit discount — but global physical supply is still clearing. The key risk for crude benchmarks is not today’s sanctions regime but a potential future step: a full maritime-services ban on Russian oil, rather than price caps. That kind of shift would directly constrain volumes and would almost certainly widen the backwardation and push Brent BZ=F back into the mid-$70s or higher.

Despite high-profile rhetoric, the European Union remains a material buyer of Russian molecules. In January, the EU was the fourth-largest buyer of Russian fossil fuels, taking about €1.1 billion of supply from Russia’s top-five customer set. Roughly 59% of that was LNG (€657 million), with pipeline gas adding €319 million and crude under Druzhba exemptions about €137 million.

On a broader view, EU buyers still account for almost half — around 49% — of Russian LNG exports, with China taking about 23% and Japan 18%. For pipeline gas, the EU is again top at around 35%, ahead of China at 31% and Turkiye at 27%. That dependency explains why Russia’s gas revenues rose 3% month-on-month even as LNG revenues fell 18% and coal revenues dropped 23%.

For WTI CL=F and Brent BZ=F, this matters because it constrains how far Western policymakers are willing to push an embargo. Europe’s combined January fossil-fuel payments to Russia from its top five member-state importers came to around €915 million, 85% of which was natural gas. France alone imported about €315 million of Russian LNG in January, with volumes up 57% month-on-month, while total French LNG inflows rose only 15%. Belgium and Spain continue to receive Russian LNG as well.

As long as this structure persists, Russian exports will be squeezed but not choked. Urals will keep trading below Brent BZ=F, anchoring a discount in the wider barrel universe. That dynamic limits upside blow-off in Brent and WTI, but leaves an embedded geopolitical call option: any step toward a real maritime-services ban, tanker detention wave or shutdown of ship-to-ship transfers in EU waters would take millions of barrels out of the pool and reprice the entire curve higher.

Short-term moves in CL=F and BZ=F are whipsawing on headlines from the Gulf. Crude dropped more than 2% on Tuesday as traders priced a higher probability that Iran and the United States strike at least a partial nuclear understanding. After talks in Geneva, Iran’s foreign minister publicly said both sides had agreed on “guiding principles” for a future deal, which would imply lower odds of a direct clash and a lower risk of a prolonged disruption in Gulf exports.

Hours later, the same Iran partially closed navigation in the Strait of Hormuz during military drills. Even a temporary closure of the world’s most important oil chokepoint, through which roughly a fifth of global crude and products move, was enough to flip sentiment. Brent rebounded to about $67.6 and WTI CL=F to about $62.5 as traders reassessed the probability of any sudden supply shock. A political-risk house put the odds of a U.S. strike on Iranian assets by April at roughly 65%, a non-trivial scenario that keeps risk desks long gamma and refiners reluctant to run minimal inventories.

At the same time, there is a competing narrative that a broader diplomatic reset could push prices lower. One of the more aggressive scenario analyses in the headlines suggests that if a new U.S. administration secures parallel deals with Iran and Russia, crude could reprice toward $60 per barrel. That number is more political headline than base-case forecast, but it shows how quickly macro narratives can swing.

For now, markets are not trading either extreme. Brent BZ=F around $67–$69 and WTI CL=F around $62–$64 imply a modest risk premium on top of a well-supplied physical market. The real repricing comes only if talks break down and the Hormuz threat shifts from drills to actual disruption — or if a comprehensive deal leads to a material increase in legitimate Iranian exports and a further normalization of Russian flows.

Away from barrels and tankers, oil is still part of a cross-asset risk complex dominated by equities, rates and the dollar. Asian equities are showing resilience: Japan’s Nikkei 225 is up close to 0.9% around 57,090, recovering from a three-day losing streak, while Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 is about 0.5% higher. Several major Asian markets — including Hong Kong, Singapore and South Korea — remain closed for holidays, moderating liquidity.

In the U.S., the Dow, S&P 500 and Nasdaq managed small gains — roughly 0.07%, 0.10% and 0.14% respectively — after an early selloff that took the S&P 500 down nearly 0.9% intraday before dip-buyers stepped in. Ten-year Treasury yields are parked around 4.05%, with 30-year yields near 4.68%. The dollar index is steady around 97.1, while the euro trades near $1.18 and sterling near $1.36.

For WTI CL=F and Brent BZ=F, that backdrop means the macro headwind is manageable but real. A firm dollar dulls the purchasing power of non-U.S. buyers, and AI jitters can trigger broader de-risking across commodities, particularly from systematic and CTA strategies that trade baskets rather than fundamentals. At the same time, gold prices near $4,867 per ounce and silver around $73.3 per ounce — however one interprets these levels in nominal terms — point to continued demand for hedges, which historically correlates with at least some support for energy as a portfolio diversifier.

Net-net, the cross-asset picture does not justify panic selling of oil here. Growth fears are present but not dominant, yields are elevated but stable, and risk assets are absorbing bad AI headlines without a wholesale liquidation. That leaves CL=F and BZ=F free to trade more on physical data, sanctions and geopolitics than purely on macro fear.

Putting the pieces together, the current range for WTI CL=F in the low-$60s and Brent BZ=F just under $70 looks like a balance point between three forces: record Asian demand, structurally discounted Russian supply, and binary geopolitical risk.

On the downside, you have three main anchors. First, the idea that a comprehensive diplomatic push — combining progress on the Iran nuclear file with some kind of U.S.–Russia accommodation — could unlock more sanctioned barrels and move prices toward $60. Second, the empirical evidence that Russian Urals can still clear at around $54.2 per barrel despite caps, which means marginal barrels are still available at a notable discount. Third, softening institutional demand in some ETF and futures products, which is pushing more capital into yield-bearing alternatives.

On the upside, the drivers are both fundamental and political. Asia is on track for 28.51 mbpd of crude imports this month versus 27.48 mbpd in December and 26.22 mbpd in January. China is importing around 2.07–2.08 mbpd of Russian crude alone, while boosting purchases from Saudi Arabia after aggressive price cuts. India, despite trimming Russian barrels at Jamnagar, is still importing over 2 billion euros’ worth of Russian hydrocarbons in a single month when you include coal and products. Turkiye and Brazil remain large buyers of Russian oil products, with Turkiye taking around €2 billion of Russian hydrocarbons in January and acting as a key hub for both crude and refined flows.

If Hormuz tensions escalate beyond drills, or if sanctions evolve into a genuine maritime-services ban rather than a leaky price cap, the physical balance tightens quickly. Seaborne Russian crude exports rose 19% in January precisely because shadow tankers and ship-to-ship transfers in EU waters provided a safety valve. An aggressive crackdown on those practices — especially on the 50-plus shadow vessels older than 20 years, many with dubious insurance — would tighten supply, raise freight costs and steepen the backwardation in Brent BZ=F. In that scenario, Brent in the mid-$70s and WTI in the high-$60s are straightforward numbers, with higher spikes possible if any infrastructure is hit.

Between those extremes, the most realistic near-term map is a $60–$68 band for WTI CL=F and a $64–$74 band for Brent BZ=F, with frequent 2–3% daily swings as headlines toggle between progress and setback in Iran–US talks and between enforcement and loopholes in Russia sanctions.

Given current levels — WTI CL=F hovering in the low-$60s and Brent BZ=F just under $70 — the balance of data argues for a Hold with a tactical bullish bias, not an outright chase or an aggressive short.

On one side of the scale, you have: record Asian crude imports at 28.51 mbpd; Chinese and Indian refiners still expanding runs; Urals crude at $54.2 with only a ~$9.85 discount to Brent, confirming that demand for discounted barrels remains firm; and a sanctions architecture that is tightening Russian fiscal space without collapsing volumes. Add in the live possibility of miscalculation around Hormuz and a still-elevated 65% probability of some form of U.S. strike on Iranian targets by April, and the upside tail risk is obvious.

On the other side, there is a credible path to softer prices if diplomacy actually delivers: Iranian exports normalize, Russian flows become more regularized under a different political deal, and Citi-style $60 scenarios move from the opinion page into the trading book. Macro conditions — steady 4%-plus U.S. yields, a firm dollar, and periodic AI-driven equity selloffs — cap how much risk long-only allocators are willing to add to commodities at one time.

Putting a label on it: at low-$60s WTI CL=F and high-$60s Brent BZ=F, Oil is not screaming cheap or expensive. For directional traders, dips towards $60 on WTI and mid-$60s on Brent look like reasonable levels to add exposure against a stop below the recent swing lows, targeting any move back toward the upper end of the current range. For portfolio allocators, the more rational stance is a Hold: keep existing energy exposure, use volatility to rebalance around core positions, and wait for either a real diplomatic breakthrough or a clear escalation in the Gulf or in sanctions enforcement before materially changing the size of the bet.

That’s TradingNEWS.com

Original Post

Share196Tweet123
admin

admin

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
AUD/USD Forecast: Australian Dollar Dumped as Fed Repricing Bites

AUD/USD Forecast: Australian Dollar Dumped as Fed Repricing Bites

March 17, 2026
Why the Next Recession Will Be the Catalyst for Depression

Why the Next Recession Will Be the Catalyst for Depression

January 30, 2026
Booming Exports Shrink US Trade Deficit as Energy Shipments Rise

Booming Exports Shrink US Trade Deficit as Energy Shipments Rise

March 17, 2026
gold-and-silver:-technical-formations-might-signal-caution-|-investing.com

Gold and Silver: Technical Formations Might Signal Caution | Investing.com

0
gold-sets-new-highs,-with-further-gains-ahead-|-investing.com

Gold Sets New Highs, With Further Gains Ahead | Investing.com

0
why-platinum-and-palladium-could-outperform-gold-|-investing.com

Why Platinum and Palladium Could Outperform Gold | Investing.com

0
Retail Sales Suggest Consumer Strength Is Less Impressive in Real Terms

Retail Sales Suggest Consumer Strength Is Less Impressive in Real Terms

April 30, 2026
Silver Nears Key $78.55–$77.06 Accumulation Zone as Cycle Pressure Builds

Silver Nears Key $78.55–$77.06 Accumulation Zone as Cycle Pressure Builds

April 30, 2026
Gold Holds Above $4,800, but Resistance Limits Breakout

Gold Holds Above $4,800, but Resistance Limits Breakout

April 30, 2026
Bullion Market

Copyright © 2026.

Markets. Metals. Insight.

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact

Follow Us

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Gold
    • Gold Price Movements
    • Gold Market News
    • Gold Charts
  • Platinum & Palladium
    • Platinum Market News
    • Platinum Market Price Movement
    • Palladium Market News
    • Platinum Charts
  • Silver
    • Silver Market News
    • Silver Market Forecasts
    • Silver Market Price Movement
    • Silver Mining Updates
  • Other Markets
    • Spot Market
    • Futures & Options
    • Currency / Forex

Copyright © 2026.