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Each metal is governed by a planet. Track cosmic trends.
Ruled by Sun
Sun strength: 85%. Strong planetary support.
Ruled by Moon
Moon strength: 50%. Mixed influences.
Ruled by Venus
Venus strength: 85%. Strong planetary support.
Ruled by Jupiter
Jupiter strength: 98%. Strong planetary support.
Ruled by Mars
Mars strength: 83%. Strong planetary support.
For entertainment purposes only. Not financial advice. Past astrological correlations do not guarantee future results. Please consult a licensed financial advisor before making investment decisions. Gambling involves risk of loss.
Gold (Sun), Silver (Moon), Platinum (Saturn), and Palladium (Rahu) are each scored based on their ruling planet's current dignity and aspects.
The balance between malefic activity (Saturn, Mars, Rahu — driving safe-haven demand) and benefic activity (Jupiter, Venus — encouraging risk appetite) determines the overall precious metals outlook.
Metals are ranked by cosmic favorability — which metal's ruling planet is currently strongest, suggesting where capital flows within the precious metals space.
In Vedic astrology, each precious metal has a clear planetary ruler. Gold belongs to the Sun — the king of the planetary cabinet, the source of light, authority, and intrinsic value. Just as the Sun is central to the solar system, gold is central to the global monetary system — the asset everything else is measured against. When the Sun is strong (in Leo, Aries, or elevated in the chart), gold tends to hold or gain value. When the Sun is combust by conjunction with other planets or debilitated (in Libra), gold may face headwinds.
Silver is ruled by the Moon — the planet of reflection, public sentiment, and liquidity. Silver's dual nature as both precious metal and industrial commodity mirrors the Moon's dual nature as both luminary and the fastest-moving celestial body. Silver tends to be more volatile than gold, just as the Moon changes signs every 2.5 days compared to the Sun's monthly transitions. Platinum and palladium fall under Saturn and Rahu respectively — Saturn governing the scarcity and industrial utility of platinum, Rahu governing the speculative, emerging-market dynamics of palladium.
Gold's role as a safe-haven asset has deep cosmic logic. The Sun represents permanence, sovereignty, and intrinsic authority — qualities that gold has embodied across every civilization in human history. When other planetary energies create chaos (Rahu disruptions, Saturn restrictions, Mars conflicts), investors flee to gold — they flee to Sun energy, seeking the stability and permanence that the Sun represents.
The Sun-Jupiter relationship is particularly significant for gold. Jupiter, the great benefic, represents expansion and inflation. When Jupiter and the Sun are in harmonious aspect (trine or conjunction), gold often rises because inflationary expectations increase (Jupiter expands) and gold is the traditional inflation hedge (Sun — permanent value). When Jupiter opposes or squares the Sun, gold may face competing forces — expansion without the safe-haven bid, or safe-haven demand without inflationary support.
The association between metals and celestial bodies is one of the oldest and most universal human observations. Ancient Egyptian temples dedicated gold to Ra, the sun god — the connection between gold and the Sun was literal in their cosmology. In Vedic tradition, gold is Hiranya — a word that appears in the Rig Veda's creation hymn (Hiranyagarbha — the golden womb from which the universe was born). Silver's lunar association spans from the Greek goddess Selene (whose name gives us "selenium") to the Latin "luna" (from which we get "lunatic" — Moon-madness — and the chemical symbol Ag from "argentum," the silvery white of moonlight). Alchemists formalized the metal-planet correspondences that astrologers had long used: Sun-Gold, Moon-Silver, Mars-Iron, Mercury-Quicksilver, Jupiter-Tin, Venus-Copper, Saturn-Lead. These weren't arbitrary assignments — they reflected observed correlations between planetary cycles and metal prices in ancient markets, observations that modern financial astrologers continue to refine with real-time data and statistical analysis.