Gold remains near nominal all‑time highs, trading just above the $2,800‑$2,900 level after a modest pull‑back from a peak around $2,800 on the futures market. Central banks worldwide have continued to add to their reserves, providing a “robust appetite” that has prevented a sharp crash despite technical forecasts of a drop to $2,200. The recent correction has likely removed weaker hands, leaving the market more resilient.
Key factors supporting gold in 2025:
- Weakening US labor market and consumer spending – data since mid‑2023 show a slowdown that undermines the “American exceptionalism” narrative and reduces the need for aggressive Fed tightening.
- Continued central‑bank buying – governments and sovereign wealth funds are still accumulating gold as a hedge against currency instability.
- Geopolitical uncertainty – sanctions, the weaponisation of the US dollar, and strained international relations increase demand for a non‑sovereign safe‑haven asset.
Overall, the speaker sees “significant upside” for gold with limited near‑term downside.
Silver
Silver’s price dynamics differ from gold because a large share of its demand is industrial (solar panels, electronics, medicine). Historically, silver has underperformed gold early in bull markets but often outperforms over the full cycle; only the 2010‑2012 rally broke this pattern.
Considerations for 2025:
- Higher confidence in gold price appreciation than in silver, but the expectation that silver could rise more sharply once the metal gains momentum.
- Secondary supply constraints – while gold’s secondary supply (e.g., jewelry, heirlooms) is limited, silver has a much larger pool of scrap (silverware, coins). This can dampen price spikes, as owners may sell silver quickly when prices rise.
- Industrial demand – continued growth in renewable energy and electronics could support the metal, but the outlook remains tied to broader economic health.
Uranium
Uranium delivered a 100 % return in 2023, doubling in price. A correction in 2024 brought the spot price back to roughly ± $80 per pound, which still sits above the long‑term production cost, creating an incentive for dormant mines to restart and for new projects to launch.
Drivers for a continued uptrend:
- Long‑term contract price trend remains upward, providing a price floor for producers.
- Supply‑side incentives – prices above cost of production are encouraging the re‑activation of mothballed mines and the development of new facilities.
- Demand growth – China plans to add about 10 reactors per year, targeting 100 new reactors over the next decade. Eastern Europe is also pursuing rapid reactor expansion.
- Strategic projects – examples include a reactor being brought back online on a U.S. island to power Microsoft data centers, underscoring the link between uranium and high‑tech infrastructure.
The speaker expects the spot price to stay near the $80 level and to rise further as supply constraints tighten.
Copper (Highest‑Conviction Trade for 2025)
Copper is identified as the top pick for 2025 due to a combination of strong demand, constrained supply, and macro‑policy support.
Supporting points:
- Demand resilience – copper is essential for construction, renewable‑energy infrastructure, and a broad range of industrial applications.
- Supply challenges – major producers such as Peru have struggled to return to pre‑pandemic output levels, highlighting the difficulty of scaling production quickly.
- Policy stimulus (“money helicopters”) – governments are likely to inject fiscal support to counteract recessionary pressures, which historically boosts industrial metal prices.
- Potential price move – a rise from $4 to $6 per pound (≈ 50 % increase) is deemed plausible given supply deficits and continued stimulus.
The speaker does not expect a doubling of price but sees a 50 % upside as realistic.
Oil
Oil is also viewed positively, though its dynamics differ from copper:
- OPEC+ supply discipline – voluntary production cuts keep the market from a glut, supporting price stability.
- Geopolitical risk – sanctions and trade tensions can create short‑term spikes, but the long‑term outlook is tied to global economic recovery.
Geopolitical and Macro Context
- Currency tensions – the US dollar’s relative strength is waning as European economies face political and fiscal instability (e.g., France, Germany). A weaker dollar generally benefits gold.
- Sanctions and legal actions – high‑profile cases such as the US prosecution of an Indian businessman illustrate growing distrust among nations, reinforcing gold’s role as a hedge.
- Rare‑earth export controls – China’s recent bans on critical metals (gallium, germanium, antimony) signal a willingness to weaponise supply chains, adding to the safe‑haven narrative for precious metals.
- Ongoing conflicts – the Russia‑Ukraine war and tensions in the Middle East continue to trigger “flight‑to‑safety” flows into gold and the dollar during spikes, though the overall trend points to a broader, longer‑term shift toward gold as a store of value.
Summary
- Gold: Near all‑time highs, supported by central‑bank buying, weakening US labor data, and geopolitical risk; outlook is bullish with limited downside.
- Silver: Industrial demand and secondary‑supply dynamics create a more volatile outlook; likely to lag gold initially but could outperform over the full cycle.
- Uranium: Price stabilized around $80/lb after a 2023 rally; demand from China’s reactor expansion and supply‑side incentives suggest further upside.
- Copper: Highest conviction for 2025; supply constraints and fiscal stimulus could lift prices 50 % or more.
- Oil: Positive outlook due to OPEC+ discipline, but less dramatic upside than copper.
Investors focusing on 2025 should weigh the balance between demand growth, supply bottlenecks, and macro‑policy environments when allocating to these commodities.





