# [WARNING] Gold, silver slump as US 30y yield hits 19-year high

*Tuesday, May 19, 2026 at 10:47 PM UTC — Hamer Intelligence Services Desk*

**Detected**: 2026-05-19T22:47:13.148Z (2h ago)
**Tags**: MARKET, financial, rates, precious_metals, US
**Sources**: OSINT
**Permalink**: https://hamerintel.com/data/alerts/7401.md
**Source**: https://hamerintel.com/summaries

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**Summary**: US 30-year Treasury yields have surged above 5.19%, the highest since before the 2008 crisis, triggering a sharp selloff in gold and silver. The move reflects a rapid repricing of long-term real rates and term premium, pressuring duration-sensitive assets and safe-haven metals.

## Detail

US long-end rates have broken to new cycle highs, with the 30-year Treasury yield topping 5.19%, the highest level in nearly 19 years. This marks a significant tightening in long-term financial conditions and a notable move higher in real yields, given that inflation expectations have not risen commensurately.

For precious metals, this is a textbook bearish shock: higher real yields increase the opportunity cost of holding non‑yielding assets. The reports state that gold and silver are already "sinking" on the move. A >1% intraday move in gold and a larger percentage move in silver are consistent with this kind of yield spike; further downside is likely if the yield move is sustained into the close or accelerates.

Commodity implications:
- Gold: Bearish near term. Higher real yields and the perception that the Fed can tolerate tighter long-end conditions reduce the monetary-hedge bid. Short-term specs may add to selling; ETF outflows could follow if yields remain elevated.
- Silver: Bearish, likely more volatile than gold due to thinner liquidity and its hybrid industrial/monetary role.
- Risk assets: Higher term premium and mortgage rates raise concerns about US growth in 2026–27, incrementally negative for cyclical commodities (industrial metals, some energy demand) over a multi-quarter horizon, though this will not be immediate.
- USD: Typically supported in this environment as yield differentials widen, pressuring EM FX and commodities priced in dollars.

Historically, similar abrupt repricings of the US long end (e.g., 2013 taper tantrum, late 2018, parts of 2023) have produced multi-percent moves in gold and broad risk reallocation. The critical question is whether this is a one-day overshoot or the market starting to price a structurally higher neutral rate. If sustained above 5%, the impact on precious metals and duration-heavy assets is structural over months; if reversed by data or Fed communication, the effect could partially mean-revert within days. For now, the move is large enough and anchored in macro rather than idiosyncratic news to justify a higher risk premium on rates and a lower equilibrium for gold and silver prices.

**AFFECTED ASSETS:** Gold, Silver, US 30y Treasury futures (USU6 and curve), DXY, EM FX (broad), S&P GSCI Precious Metals Index
