Just noticed something wild—Wall Street is finally waking up to what we've known for years. The biggest banks are throwing out gold and silver price targets that would've sounded crazy a decade ago. JPMorgan's calling for gold above $6,300, UBS at $6,200, and some are even talking silver hitting $100+. That's not a small move. We're talking 30-50% from where we are now.



The story behind these gold and silver price targets is straightforward enough. Central banks keep buying gold like it's going out of style. Fiat keeps losing purchasing power. Meanwhile silver's got actual demand—solar panels, EV batteries, AI chips all need it. The banks are basically admitting what crypto people figured out years ago: paper money doesn't have a floor.

Looking at the actual gold and silver price targets across the street, there's a cluster around $6,000-$6,300 for gold. Goldman's more conservative at $5,400, but even that's still higher than today's $4,614. Bank of America's silver call at $135-$309 sounds insane until you think about supply shocks or a real currency crisis. The $135 level though? That's just a double from here, which feels realistic if industrial demand keeps growing.

On the technicals, gold's sitting at $4,614 with the 200-day at $4,288—solid bullish structure. We're consolidating between $4,600 and $4,650 right now. Break above $4,650 and we could see $4,800, then $5,000. That's the gateway to those Wall Street targets everyone's talking about. RSI's neutral at 48.89, so momentum's cooled but there's room to run.

Silver's at $75.36 after that massive correction from the $130 highs. The $75 level keeps holding on dips, which is bullish. If we break $75 to the downside, $72 and $68 are next. But hold here and a bounce toward $80-$88 looks likely. That $100 level would be confirmation of a real move higher.

Honestly, the lower-end targets feel more realistic than the extreme calls. But the fact that even the most conservative banks are bullish on gold and silver price targets tells you something about how they're viewing currency strength going forward. The real question is whether we get the clean break above $5,000 in gold first.
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