Silver prices moved lower on Tuesday, with XAG/USD slipping below the $80 mark as investors tracked renewed tension around Iran and fresh swings in oil markets. Data showed silver at $78.85 per troy ounce, down 1.10% from $79.73 on Monday, while the gold-silver ratio edged up to 60.66 from 60.46 a day earlier. The move followed a volatile stretch in commodities after disruption around the Strait of Hormuz pushed energy markets back into focus. Although silver remains up 10.93% since the start of the year, near-term price action has turned cautious as traders weigh geopolitical risk, interest-rate expectations, and industrial demand. Iran Tensions and Oil Volatility Pressure Silver Prices Renewed stress in the Middle East has added a fresh layer of uncertainty to metals trading. Shipping traffic through the Strait of Hormuz slowed sharply after escalating tension between Iran and the United States, while oil prices jumped as the market reacted to supply disruption risk. China called for the strait to remain open to normal maritime traffic, reflecting wider concern about the economic effect of the disruption. That backdrop has weighed on silver after last week’s advance. The metal often draws support during periods of geopolitical stress, but it also reacts to moves in the US dollar, Treasury yields, and broader commodity pricing. In this case, rising oil prices and a cautious market tone have kept silver from extending its earlier gains, leaving XAG/USD trading around the high-$78 to high-$79 range on Tuesday. XAG/USD Falls Below $80 After Recent Rally Stalls Silver traded at $78.85 per troy ounce on Tuesday, while separate market commentary cited a trading range near $79.50 to $79.80 after a retreat from Friday’s $80.80 to $82 zone. The pullback leaves Silver below a level that had become an important reference point during the recent rally. The market has repeatedly tested the $80 area in recent sessions, but buying momentum has not been strong enough to keep the price above that threshold. XAG/USD | TradingView Analysts tracking price action said Silver was holding close to support around $78.00 to $78.10, near its short-term moving-average base, while resistance remained at $80.60 and then $83.00. Another analysis described the $80 area as a price magnet, with traders watching whether dips continue to attract buyers or whether a deeper break opens the way toward lower support levels. China Silver Demand Remains Strong Silver’s broader demand picture still offers support even as spot prices soften. China’s Silver imports rose to about 836 tonnes in March, far above the 10-year March average of roughly 306 tonnes, driven by retail buying and demand from the solar sector. Earlier, strong domestic demand had pushed Chinese silver prices to a premium over international markets and encouraged arbitrage flows. Even so, Silver prices have pulled back from January record highs, and the Chinese retail momentum has cooled. China remains a major source of industrial demand for Silver, especially through solar manufacturing. A softer pace in retail buying may limit immediate upside, even as structural demand from energy-transition sectors continues to support the market over a longer period. For now, the short-term outlook depends on whether silver can hold the upper $78 area. Market commentary on Tuesday identified support around $78.00 and $77.90, with a lower level near $75.18 if selling pressure deepens. On the upside, resistance stands at $80.60 and then $83.00, the level that capped the recent advance.