Today: 9 June 2026
Silver price today: Spot silver rebounds above $88 after brutal rout as margins and Fed politics collide
3 February 2026
2 mins read

Silver price today: Spot silver rebounds above $88 after brutal rout as margins and Fed politics collide

New York, Feb 3, 2026, 10:08 EST — Regular session

  • Spot silver climbed roughly 11% following a sharp three-day slump and its biggest single-day plunge on record last week
  • CME has raised margin requirements for silver futures, increasing the cash traders must put up to maintain their positions
  • Traders are also monitoring data delays caused by the U.S. shutdown for clues on the next rate move

Spot silver surged 11.3% on Tuesday, hitting $88.1545 an ounce after closing Monday at $79.214, as dip buyers returned following a steep selloff.

After a week of wild swings that made silver the most volatile major metal in trading, prices have finally bounced back. Quantitative Commodity Research analyst Peter Fertig called it a rebound, saying the market was oversold. He tied the recent selloff to U.S. President Donald Trump’s nomination of Kevin Warsh as the next Federal Reserve chairman. Saxo Bank’s Ole Hansen highlighted $90.58 and $96.52 as key retracement levels—points where traders often spot resistance following a decline.

CME Clearing hiked the minimum performance bond for COMEX 5,000-ounce silver futures, raising it to 15% from 11% for standard risk accounts and to 16.5% from 12.1% for heightened-risk profiles. These changes kicked in after the close on Feb. 2, according to CME notices.

Monday’s drop highlighted how quickly rising margins and a stronger dollar can hit leveraged positions, even amid markets with strong long-term demand. “Gold and silver are on a rollercoaster ride,” said SP Angel analyst John Meyer. Deutsche Bank’s Michael Hsueh added that the environment doesn’t appear “primed for a sustained reversal” in gold — a cautious stance traders are extending to silver as well. Reuters

The macro calendar hit a snag. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics announced the January employment report will be delayed after a partial government shutdown paused some data processing. This throws a wrench into investors’ efforts to gauge when the Fed might start cutting rates.

But the downside remains a real threat: London analysts warn silver could fall further, eyeing a “fundamentally supported” range near $60-$70 if volatility stays high and forced selling kicks back in. Hansen pointed to China — a major recent demand driver — as key to finding a floor, along with a calming of volatility after a retail-fueled surge triggered stop-loss orders once prices started to drop. Reuters

Right now, traders see Tuesday’s action as a probe to determine if the metal’s technical bounce can hold up or if it’s merely another swing in a market that still feels stuck in liquidation mode.

Turning to this week, all eyes are on the exchanges too. CME Group plans to roll out a 100-ounce silver futures contract on Feb. 9, subject to regulatory approval. It’s a clear sign that liquidity and positioning — beyond just fundamentals — are shaping the action.

The next steps are clear: funding negotiations in Washington, the updated schedule for jobs data, and watching if silver can climb back toward the low-$90s without sparking more margin selling.

Stock Market Today

  • Proxy Adviser Supports Nanoco Group's Plan to Delist from LSE
    June 9, 2026, 9:17 AM EDT. Nanoco Group PLC, a nanotechnology firm, announced that independent proxy adviser Glass Lewis has recommended shareholders approve the company's resolution to delist from the London Stock Exchange (LSE). The move signals a significant shift for Nanoco, potentially changing its trading and regulatory environment. Shareholder approval for such a resolution typically permits a company to withdraw its shares from public exchange trading, often to pursue private ownership or alternative funding routes. This development follows Nanoco's strategic review and may impact investor access and share liquidity. The recommendation by Glass Lewis adds weight to the proposal ahead of the upcoming shareholder vote.

Latest articles

GSK’s $10.6 Billion Oncology Leap Goes Deeper Than Headlines Show

GSK’s $10.6 Billion Oncology Leap Goes Deeper Than Headlines Show

9 June 2026
GSK will buy Nuvalent for $10.6 billion in cash, paying a 40% premium, to boost its oncology pipeline ahead of looming HIV drug patent expiries; Nuvalent shares jumped 38.9% premarket while GSK fell 1.4%, with the deal expected to add to GSK sales and profit from 2027 but dilute earnings per share 2026-2028 if it closes in Q3, and final outcome depends on FDA approvals and regulatory clearance.
AmpliTech’s 5G Radio Test Moves AMPG Shares

AmpliTech’s 5G Radio Test Moves AMPG Shares

9 June 2026
AMPG soared 26.7% to $6.57 after AmpliTech revealed its 64T64R Massive MIMO radio was the only one of its kind at O-RAN PlugFest, showing interoperability with major carriers’ equipment, but no new orders were announced, leaving sales conversion as the key investor focus.
Cartesian Growth Ticker Change Draws Trader Attention to Factorial Energy

Cartesian Growth Ticker Change Draws Trader Attention to Factorial Energy

9 June 2026
Factorial Energy surged 16% to $13.80 in its Nasdaq debut as FAC, with premarket trading near $20.70, after replacing CGCT via SPAC merger that raised over $100 million for battery commercialization and implied a $1.3 billion equity value; former CGCT shares now trade as FAC, with founders retaining majority voting power and staged lock-up releases ahead.
Pfizer Falls in Premarket; Fresh FDA Approval Not Lifting the Stock

Pfizer Falls in Premarket; Fresh FDA Approval Not Lifting the Stock

9 June 2026
Pfizer shares fell 1.7% premarket to $25.62 as investors weighed an FDA label expansion for hemophilia drug Hympavzi—now the first subcutaneous non-factor therapy for children 6-11 with hemophilia B—against slower progress in obesity drugs, with mid-stage data for weight-loss shot berobenatide showing a 23.3% vomiting rate and no immediate growth catalyst for the $147 billion company.
Snap Shares Fall Even as Nasdaq Gains; June 16 in Focus

Snap Shares Fall Even as Nasdaq Gains; June 16 in Focus

9 June 2026
Snap Inc. shares fell 1.9% to $5.65, underperforming a rising Nasdaq and leaving the stock 46% below its 52-week high, as investors weigh weak ad revenue growth, North American user declines, and cost-cutting moves against ongoing competitive pressure from Meta and TikTok.
Microsoft stock price slips early: MSFT hit by Azure glitches as OpenAI spreads across clouds
Previous Story

Microsoft stock price slips early: MSFT hit by Azure glitches as OpenAI spreads across clouds

Constellation Software’s 48% slide has investors split as AI fears rattle software stocks
Next Story

Constellation Software’s 48% slide has investors split as AI fears rattle software stocks

Go toTop