Silver Price Hits New All‑Time High Above $57 as Global Supply Squeeze Intensifies – 2025–2026 Outlook

Silver Price Hits New All‑Time High Above $57 as Global Supply Squeeze Intensifies – 2025–2026 Outlook

Silver has just smashed through yet another all‑time high, trading above $57 per ounce on 1 December 2025, as traders around the world pile into the metal on the back of tightening supply, aggressive rate‑cut bets and booming industrial demand. [1]


Silver price today (1 December 2025): near-record levels

On Monday, spot silver (XAG/USD):

  • Climbed above $57/oz, with intraday highs reported around $57.29–$57.86 – a fresh all‑time record. [2]
  • Was up roughly 1–2% on the day, extending a six‑session winning streak. [3]
  • Has roughly doubled in 2025 and is up around 160% from its October 2023 low of $20.67. [4]

A Trading Economics/TradingView update notes that silver “climbed more than 1% to above $57 per ounce,” pushing to about $57.29 as traders priced in a December US Federal Reserve rate cut and reacted to ongoing tightness in physical supply. [5]

This latest spike builds on Friday’s rally, when silver briefly hit a record $56.78/oz during a volatile session marked by a major CME Group outage that temporarily halted futures trading. [6]

Historic breakout: 2025 rewrites the silver record book

Until this year, the key reference points for silver’s all‑time highs were:

  • ~$49.95 in 1980, during the infamous Hunt brothers squeeze. [7]
  • ~$49.80 in April 2011 during the post‑GFC precious metals boom. [8]

In 2025, silver has blown past both levels:

  • It first surpassed $50/oz in October, then set a new record around $54.47/oz, officially eclipsing the 1980 US‑dollar high. [9]
  • Today’s surge above $57/oz establishes a new all‑time high, with multiple sources citing peaks between $57.29 and $57.86. [10]

What’s driving the 2025 silver surge?

1. Structural supply deficits – fifth year (and counting)

The Silver Institute expects the global silver market to record another sizeable deficit in 2025, marking five consecutive years where demand has exceeded total supply. [11]

Key points from recent Silver Institute and related analyses:

  • 2025 is set for a “significant” structural deficit, continuing the shortfalls seen 2021–2024. [12]
  • Several independent summaries put the 2025 deficit in roughly the 95–120 million ounce range, depending on methodology. [13]
  • Cumulative drawdowns across the last few years are estimated at hundreds of millions of ounces, equivalent to close to one full year of global mine supply. [14]

Because about 70% of silver is produced as a byproduct of mining other metals, higher prices do not automatically trigger a rapid supply response – a key reason deficits can persist even in a bull market. [15]

2. Industrial demand: solar, EVs and electronics

Silver’s industrial story is arguably the main pillar of the rally:

  • Industrial demand rose to around 689 million ounces in 2024, up from 644 Moz in 2023. [16]
  • Solar panel manufacturing alone consumed about 243.7 Moz in 2024, up 158% from 2020. [17]
  • The IEA projects that global solar capacity additions could drive silver demand higher by ~150 Moz per year by 2030, on top of current demand. [18]

The Silver Institute has repeatedly highlighted that industrial demand is at or near record highs and remains the key driver of the supply/demand imbalance. [19]

On top of solar, demand is being boosted by:

  • Electric vehicles, which use significantly more silver per car than internal‑combustion models. [20]
  • AI data centres, 5G infrastructure and advanced electronics, all of which rely on silver’s unmatched electrical conductivity. [21]

3. Macro tailwinds: rate‑cut hopes and a weaker dollar

Silver trades as both an industrial metal and monetary metal, so macro policy matters:

  • Markets are now fully pricing in a quarter‑point US rate cut in December, amid weak labour data and delayed economic releases after the US government’s six‑week shutdown. [22]
  • Lower real yields and a softer dollar have made non‑yielding metals like silver and gold more attractive as stores of value. [23]

Analysts quoted by Reuters and the South China Morning Post note that silver is now riding on the coattails of gold’s historic bull market, but with even stronger percentage gains thanks to its dual role as a safe haven and an industrial input. [24]

4. Market structure, short squeezes and the CME outage

The 2025 rally has also been amplified by market plumbing issues:

  • major outage at CME Group’s futures platform last week halted trading for over 11 hours, just as silver was breaking out, contributing to sharp moves as the market reopened. [25]
  • Mining.com reports spot silver spiking to a new record around $55.66, with three‑month futures near $57.37during the turmoil. [26]
  • FXStreet previously documented a historic short squeeze in London, which helped propel silver above $52.50back in October. [27]

At the same time:

  • record inflow of ~54 Moz into London vaults in October helped temporarily ease that squeeze, but inventories on the Shanghai Futures Exchange recently fell to near decade lows before ticking slightly higher again. [28]
  • Lease rates and the cost of borrowing silver remain elevated, signalling continuing tightness in the physical market. [29]

All of this has created a feedback loop where thin liquidity, persistent deficits and speculative flows reinforce each other, amplifying price swings both upward and downward.


Global snapshot: how the rally looks around the world

United States & London (COMEX / LBMA)

  • COMEX inventories have reportedly seen tens of millions of ounces withdrawn since early October, as investors and industrial users pull metal into private and off‑exchange storage. [30]
  • London remains the key hub for wholesale silver trading, with October’s record inflows arriving after a historic squeeze sent borrowing costs and lease rates surging. [31]

India: MCX prices explode towards ₹2 lakh/kg

In India, silver has been on its own tear:

  • March 2026 silver futures on the MCX surged intraday to about ₹1,78,649 per kg, a fresh all‑time high. [32]
  • Analysts there see scope for the contract to test ₹1,85,000–₹1,90,000 in the short term and even reach ₹2,00,000/kg in early 2026 if the global uptrend persists. [33]
  • Local commentators also highlight a 45‑year technical breakout, the rupee’s weakness against the dollar, and the fact that the US has added silver to its “critical minerals” list, prompting other countries to consider building strategic reserves. [34]

China: solar demand vs. strained inventories

China sits at the centre of the industrial story:

  • The National Energy Administration plans to add around 160 GW of new solar capacity in 2025, a key driver of silver paste demand. [35]
  • Shanghai Futures Exchange silver stocks recently fell to their lowest level since 2015, before modest restocking in late November. [36]
  • Trading volumes on the Shanghai Gold Exchange have slumped to multi‑year lows, suggesting constrained spot availability even as prices hit records. [37]

What analysts are saying today (1 December 2025)

Today’s price action has triggered a wave of fresh analysis. Highlights include:

  • Reuters reports silver up about 1.1% to ~$56.99/oz after touching $57.86, noting that the move is being fuelled by a weaker dollar, risk‑off sentiment in equities and an 80‑plus percent implied probability of a December Fed cut. [38]
  • Bloomberg/SCMP update stresses that silver has doubled in value this year, with traders “placing speculative bets” on the back of ongoing supply tightness and imminent rate cuts. [39]
  • Trading Economics/TradingView emphasise that silver has climbed more than 1% to above $57, surpassing Friday’s post‑outage peak, while noting that Shanghai inventories remain near decade lows. [40]

On the more technical side:

  • FXLeaders notes that silver stalled near $57.86, with momentum indicators flashing early exhaustion. Their near‑term roadmap: support around $54.20–$54.40 and upside targets at $56.70 and $59.12 if the pullback remains “healthy.” [41]
  • Economies.com reports that silver has broken above key resistance at $54.35 and $55.80, generating a series of new all‑time highs and reinforcing the dominant short‑term bullish trend. [42]
  • VT Markets highlights a historic intraday peak above $57.60, with prices stretched well above the 100‑day EMA (~$45.60) and RSI signals warning of overbought conditions. [43]

The overall message from today’s commentary: the trend is still up, but the market is hot and vulnerable to sharp corrections if sentiment or the macro backdrop shifts.


Silver price forecast: 2025–2026 scenarios

No one knows exactly where prices will settle, but we can sketch the main paths analysts are talking about, based on recent bank notes and industry research.

Base‑to‑bullish camp: $50–$70 consolidation with spikes

A range of institutions and research houses now lean toward elevated but not necessarily runaway prices:

  • A recent GoldSilver.com roundup cites third‑party forecasts such as: UBS at $55/oz by mid‑2026Bank of America near $65/oz by 2026, and independent technical forecasters targeting $77–$82/oz by 2030 in constructive scenarios. [44]
  • Many of these views see silver spending extended periods in a $50–$70 band, with occasional spikes above, assuming deficits persist and the Fed follows through with rate cuts. [45]

Technical‑focused outlets add more colour:

  • The Economic Times technical team flags $53 as critical short‑term support, with further support between $51–$51.20 and resistance stepping up through $54.86, $55.50 and $56. [46]
  • Indian strategists quoted by ET and other local outlets argue that, following a classic “cup and handle” breakout, silver could feasibly test $62–$65/oz on the international market over the next leg of the rally. [47]

Cautious camp: Citi and others warn of pullbacks

Not all big players are outright bullish at these levels:

  • Citi recently cut its short‑term silver forecast to $42/oz (from $55), arguing that easing geopolitical risk and progress in US‑Asia trade talks could cool safe‑haven demand and justify a partial retracement. [48]
  • Some strategists quoted by Reuters earlier this year suggested a possible correction back toward the mid‑$30sbefore any renewed push higher, citing stretched positioning. [49]

In other words, even those who buy the long‑term deficit story see room for sharp interim pullbacks – exactly what you’d expect in a high‑volatility metal that has already more than doubled in a short time.

Ultra‑bullish camp: $100+ silver?

A small but loud set of commentators think the current move is only the beginning:

  • A deVere‑summarized view from BNP Paribas suggests it is “certainly possible” for silver to reach $100/oz by the end of 2026 if macro stress and supply tightness persist. [50]
  • Fintech and retail‑oriented outlets have highlighted even more aggressive scenarios – some modelling potential paths to $133–$143/oz, or higher, under extreme assumptions about monetary debasement and supply shocks. [51]

These triple‑digit projections are very speculative and typically come with big caveats: they rely on persistent deficits and significant macro or policy shocks. Still, the fact such targets are being discussed in mainstream outlets underscores how dramatic 2025’s repricing has been.


Longer‑term outlook: 2027–2030 themes

Looking beyond the near term, most research converges on a few themes:

  1. Deficits can’t run forever without adjustment
    • If deficits stay in the ~100 Moz per year range, cumulative stock drawdowns will continue to erode above‑ground inventories, structurally supporting higher prices. [52]
    • At some point, either mine supply expandsrecycling increases, or demand is rationed via substitution and thrifting.
  2. Thrifting and substitution are already happening in solar
    • New PV technologies are slowly reducing silver content per panel, and 2025 Silver Institute guidance even forecasts a small year‑on‑year decline in silver used per module, despite record installations. [53]
  3. Silver’s industrial role is likely to grow, not shrink
    • Sprott, INN and others argue that silver is becoming a “critical material” for decarbonisation, electrification and AI infrastructure – sectors that typically grow faster than global GDP. [54]

Put together, the consensus among many institutional and specialist analysts is:

Over the next 5–10 years, silver is more likely to trade in a higher structural range than the 2010s (sub‑$30) – but within that range, volatility could be extreme.


Key risks that could derail the rally

Even in a powerful bull market, there are important downside risks:

  1. Faster‑than‑expected Fed normalization
    • If inflation falls quickly or growth remains resilient, the Fed could deliver fewer cuts than currently priced, pushing real yields up and weighing on precious metals broadly. [55]
  2. Global slowdown hitting industrial demand
    • A sharp downturn in EV sales, consumer electronics or solar installations would hurt the largest segment of silver demand and could justify a lower equilibrium price. [56]
  3. Supply response and policy shifts
    • Sustained high prices could spur new mine projects, more hedging by producers, or policy incentives to ramp recycling, gradually easing deficits. [57]
  4. Positioning wash‑outs
    • With speculative longs now significant, any surprise (for example, a delayed rate cut, peace deal, or major risk‑on rotation in equities) could trigger rapid liquidations and multi‑dollar intraday drops. [58]

What this means for investors and traders

For long‑term investors, the current environment reflects:

  • strong fundamental backdrop (multi‑year deficits, rising industrial demand).
  • Elevated macro uncertainty favouring hard assets.
  • But also very high volatility and the possibility of deep corrections even within a bull market.

For short‑term traders, current conditions in XAG/USD are characterised by:

  • Wide intraday ranges and frequent news‑driven spikes. [59]
  • Clear technical levels (roughly $53–$54 on the downside, $58–$60 on the upside) that many analysts are watching as near‑term pivots. [60]

Whichever camp you’re in, it’s worth remembering:

Silver is historically more volatile than gold. Position sizing, time horizon and risk management matter at least as much as your directional view.

This article is for information and news purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Always do your own research and consider consulting a licensed financial adviser before making investment decisions.

References

1. www.reuters.com, 2. www.reuters.com, 3. www.scmp.com, 4. www.reuters.com, 5. www.tradingview.com, 6. www.reuters.com, 7. investingnews.com, 8. www.usagold.com, 9. investingnews.com, 10. www.reuters.com, 11. silverinstitute.org, 12. silverinstitute.org, 13. www.ipmi.org, 14. edrsilver.com, 15. deriv.com, 16. www.reuters.com, 17. www.reuters.com, 18. www.reuters.com, 19. silverinstitute.org, 20. goldsilver.com, 21. goldsilver.com, 22. www.scmp.com, 23. www.reuters.com, 24. www.reuters.com, 25. www.reuters.com, 26. www.mining.com, 27. www.fxstreet.com, 28. www.scmp.com, 29. www.scmp.com, 30. www.mining.com, 31. www.scmp.com, 32. m.economictimes.com, 33. m.economictimes.com, 34. m.economictimes.com, 35. finance.yahoo.com, 36. www.bullionvault.com, 37. www.fxstreet.com, 38. www.reuters.com, 39. www.scmp.com, 40. www.tradingview.com, 41. www.fxleaders.com, 42. www.economies.com, 43. www.vtmarkets.com, 44. goldsilver.com, 45. goldsilver.com, 46. m.economictimes.com, 47. m.economictimes.com, 48. m.economictimes.com, 49. www.reuters.com, 50. www.devere-group.com, 51. goldsilver.com, 52. www.ipmi.org, 53. silverinstitute.org, 54. sprott.com, 55. www.reuters.com, 56. www.reuters.com, 57. deriv.com, 58. www.reuters.com, 59. www.fxleaders.com, 60. www.fxleaders.com

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