Silver Jumps Above $85 an Ounce as Traders Weigh Market Balance

Silver has been on a wild ride over the past year, more than tripling in price on a wave of investor money.

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Spot gold rose 0.5% to $5,051.89 an ounce as of 7:23 a.m. in Singapore.
Photographer: Akos Stiller/Bloomberg
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Summary is AI-generated, newsroom-reviewed
  • Silver surged 6.6% amid higher investment and weaker industrial demand forecasts
  • The Silver Institute predicts a sixth consecutive year of silver market deficit
  • Industrial silver demand is expected to decline in 2026 despite solar growth
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Silver jumped, extending a run of elevated volatility, as an industry body pointed to stronger investment buying and weaker industrial demand in the year ahead.

The metal rose as much as 6.6% on Wednesday, about a third higher than last week's low. The silver market will be in deficit for a sixth consecutive year, according to a report published by the Silver Institute, as surging investment outweighs wilting demand for jewelry and efforts to curb use in the solar sector.

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Silver has been on a wild ride over the past year, more than tripling in price on a wave of investor money. That rally came to an abrupt halt with the biggest daily fall on record at the end of January. Prices have recovered somewhat since then, but remain volatile enough for some traders to dub the metal untradeable.

Industrial demand for silver is forecast to decline modestly in 2026. Despite continued growth in solar photovoltaic installations, “ongoing thrifting and outright substitution away from silver will result in falling silver PV demand,” the Silver Institute said.

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Demand for the metal in silverware is set to fall by 17% as a result of higher prices, while jewelry is forecast to fall 9%.

While a wave of investors is expected to lead to a shift in existing silver inventories, it's wrong to see the market as being in “deficit,” according to analysts at BMO Capital Markets. A better metric is how the supply of silver compares to the actual consumption of the metal for ornamental or industrial purchases, demand that removes bullion from the market.

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BMO sees silver becoming cheaper relative to gold in the coming years, as physical availability of the metal improves.

Much of the speculative demand for silver in recent months has come from China. Domestic producers and traders in the country are currently struggling to fill a backlog of orders, pushing the front-month contract on the Shanghai Futures Exchange to a record premium.

Elsewhere, investors will be watching for a January jobs report on Wednesday. US 10-year bond yields held at the lowest in nearly a month, while the dollar fell for a fourth day, making gold cheaper for many buyers. 

Any further reduction in US borrowing costs would be positive for non-yielding precious metals, and President Donald Trump's selection for Fed Chair, Kevin Warsh, has advocated for more rates cuts. 

Spot gold rose 1.6% to $5,104.81 an ounce as of 11:31 a.m. in London. Silver climbed 6.4% to $85.96 an ounce, while platinum and palladium both added more than 3%. The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index, a gauge of the US currency, fell 0.3%.

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