Published: Nov 5, 2025
At a glance (intraday, Nov 5):
- Spot silver rose about 2.2% to $48.13/oz by 2:30 p.m. ET as risk appetite cooled, lifting haven bids. [1]
- COMEX Dec ’25 silver futures (SI=F) traded between $46.90–$48.06 today. [2]
- During Asian hours, XAG/USD hovered near $47.60, snapping a three‑day losing streak before pushing higher in U.S. trade. [3]
- Live wholesale quotes showed spot around $48.24/oz in mid‑U.S. trade. [4]
What moved silver today
Silver advanced alongside gold as investors trimmed risk exposure following stronger‑than‑expected U.S. private payrolls (ADP +42,000). Despite the jobs beat, equities wobbled and haven flows supported precious metals. As of mid‑afternoon New York time, spot silver gained 2.2% to $48.13/oz, with traders also watching a U.S. Supreme Court hearing on the legality of certain tariffs—another macro risk catalyst. [5]
From a cross‑asset lens, bullion’s rebound began in Asia where XAG/USD reclaimed the $47.50 area, aided by softer risk sentiment and a steadier dollar. Momentum carried into Europe and the U.S., where futures probed the $48 handle. [6]
Gold–silver ratio: Using Reuters’ intraday prices (gold ~$3,983.89/oz; silver ~$48.13/oz), the ratio sat near 83, a touch below recent highs—implying silver marginally outperformed gold on the day. [7]
Key prices and ranges (Nov 5, intraday)
- Spot silver: $48.13/oz (+2.2% on the day, 2:30 p.m. ET). [8]
- COMEX Dec ’25 (SI=F): Day range $46.90–$48.06. [9]
- Live wholesale spot snapshot: ~$48.24/oz around late morning U.S. time. [10]
The backdrop: October’s record and a brief London squeeze
Silver is consolidating after a historic October surge above $50/oz, when spot briefly printed fresh records amid gold’s bull run and tight near‑term supply. [11] A subsequent liquidity squeeze in London—which had pushed spot premiums over U.S. futures—eased as shipments from the U.S. and China replenished inventories late last month. Those flows helped normalize pricing and volatility heading into November. [12]
Banks have also lifted their medium‑term outlooks: in August, HSBC raised silver price forecasts for 2025–2027, citing the gravitational pull from elevated gold and persistent macro uncertainty—even as they flagged softer jewelry/coin demand against firm industrial use. [13]
What technicals are signaling
- Near‑term trend: During Asian trade, buyers defended the mid‑$47s, turning momentum positive into the U.S. session. [14]
- Indicator dashboard: By Wednesday evening GMT, a widely watched set of momentum studies leaned “Buy/Strong Buy” on XAG/USD (RSI >60, MACD positive), while short‑term oscillators flashed overbought—a setup consistent with a rebound that may pause near resistance. [15]
Levels to watch:
- Resistance: $49.00–$50.00 (psychological/round‑number zone); a sustained break could re‑expose October’s record area. (Context from recent price behavior.) [16]
- Support: $47.00–$47.50 (intraday pivot and Asian session base). [17]
Today’s market narrative, in brief
- Macro impulse: A stronger ADP print didn’t derail precious metals—stocks slipped, and rate‑cut odds for December stayed in play after the Fed’s reduction last week, leaving hedges in favor. [18]
- Policy/legal watch: Traders tracked the U.S. Supreme Court tariff hearing for potential ramifications on trade‑sensitive metals. [19]
- Regional color: In India, local press noted softer retail bullion prices heading into the peak wedding/festive season after recent record highs, underscoring the role of currency and taxes in consumer demand. [20]
Why it matters
Silver straddles two demand engines—investment and industry. The structural deficit narrative, supported by robust photovoltaic and electronics demand, helped propel prices to multi‑decade highs this year; even with October’s shakeout, today’s bid shows the theme isn’t spent. (Background on 2025’s deficits and the year’s climb.) [21]
What to watch next
- U.S. labor data: Weekly claims and Friday’s nonfarm payrolls will steer rate expectations and the dollar—key drivers for silver. (Context on today’s ADP beat.) [22]
- Spreads & flows: Watch London spot vs. COMEX for signs of renewed tightness or normalization after October’s airlifts. [23]
- Industrial cues: Any updates on solar/PV installations and electronics output can reinforce the medium‑term deficit story, keeping dips shallow. (Industry‑deficit background.) [24]
Where to track live prices
- Spot price charts (global wholesale): Kitco live silver. [25]
- Intraday futures ranges: Exchange‑linked trackers for COMEX silver (e.g., SI=F). [26]
- Benchmark context: The LBMA Silver Price benchmark (administered by ICE Benchmark Administration) anchors institutional pricing; note licensing applies for real‑time/historical fix data. [27]
Editor’s note & methodology
Figures cited above reference Nov 5, 2025 intraday readings from established market data and news wires; price levels are inherently time‑stamped and subject to change. We relied on Reuters for spot prices and macro drivers, FXStreet for Asia‑session context, Yahoo Finance for the COMEX day range, BullionVault for a live wholesale snapshot, and prior Reuters reporting for October’s record highs and London market dynamics. [28]
This article is for information only and does not constitute investment advice.
References
1. www.reuters.com, 2. finance.yahoo.com, 3. www.fxstreet.com, 4. www.bullionvault.com, 5. www.reuters.com, 6. www.fxstreet.com, 7. www.reuters.com, 8. www.reuters.com, 9. finance.yahoo.com, 10. www.bullionvault.com, 11. www.reuters.com, 12. www.reuters.com, 13. www.reuters.com, 14. www.fxstreet.com, 15. www.investing.com, 16. www.reuters.com, 17. www.fxstreet.com, 18. www.reuters.com, 19. www.reuters.com, 20. maharashtratimes.com, 21. www.reuters.com, 22. www.reuters.com, 23. www.reuters.com, 24. www.reuters.com, 25. www.kitco.com, 26. finance.yahoo.com, 27. www.lbma.org.uk, 28. www.reuters.com


