Today: 1 May 2026
Sprott Physical Silver Trust (PSLV) Stock: Silver’s Record Run Fuels a Surge—Key Levels, NAV Discount, and What to Watch Before Monday’s Open
28 December 2025
5 mins read

Sprott Physical Silver Trust (PSLV) Stock: Silver’s Record Run Fuels a Surge—Key Levels, NAV Discount, and What to Watch Before Monday’s Open

NEW YORK, Dec. 27, 2025, 6:45 p.m. ET — Market closed

Sprott Physical Silver Trust (NYSE Arca: PSLV) heads into the weekend with momentum after a powerful Friday move tied directly to silver’s latest breakout. The trust’s U.S.-listed units last closed at $26.04, while Sprott’s posted net asset value (NAV) was $27.20, putting PSLV at roughly a -4.26% discount to NAV—an important metric for investors because the product is a closed-end trust, not a traditional open-ended ETF.

The immediate catalyst: silver’s rapid advance to fresh record territory. Reuters reported spot silver pushing through major psychological levels as rate-cut expectations, a weaker dollar backdrop, tight supply dynamics, and year-end liquidity conditions combined to amplify moves across precious metals.

Why PSLV moved: silver just made headlines again

Over the past 24–48 hours, silver’s rally accelerated dramatically. Reuters reported silver breaching the $77 area during Friday’s session, extending an already outsized 2025 run and pulling physically backed vehicles higher alongside silver miners.

One reason PSLV often reacts sharply during fast silver markets: it is designed to provide direct exposure to physical silver bullion, so price changes in the metal tend to pass through quickly—especially when the market is repricing macro assumptions like real yields and the policy path.

PSLV by the numbers: price, NAV, discount, and what’s in the vault

As of Sprott’s latest update (reflecting Friday’s close), PSLV showed:

  • Market price: $26.04
  • NAV: $27.20
  • Premium/discount: -4.26% (discount)
  • Silver held:208,805,141 ounces
  • Total net asset value:$16.61 billion
  • Management expense ratio:0.57%

That discount-to-NAV matters because closed-end funds can trade away from the value of the underlying holdings—sometimes for extended periods—depending on liquidity, sentiment, and investor demand. CEFConnect’s discount/premium statistics highlight how PSLV’s discount can fluctuate over time rather than staying pinned to NAV the way many commodity ETFs aim to do through creation/redemption mechanisms.

Structure and strategy: how PSLV differs from “paper silver” exposure

Sprott positions PSLV as a vehicle holding fully allocated and unencumbered silver, invested in London Good Delivery (LGD) bars. Sprott also states that unitholders can redeem units for physical silver bullion on a monthly basis (subject to minimum requirements), with custody at the Royal Canadian Mint.

That structure is a feature for long-term holders—but it also means investors should pay attention to:

  • Discount/premium versus NAV (especially on volatile days)
  • Bid/ask spreads during thin holiday markets
  • The difference between spot silver, futures pricing, and exchange-traded product pricing

What strategists are saying now: bullish targets, but a profit-taking warning

Reuters captured the core tug-of-war facing silver investors at year-end: strong trend and tight supply narratives versus the risk of abrupt swings in thin markets.

Peter Grant, vice president and senior metals strategist at Zaner Metals, said “$80 in silver is within reach by year-end,” while also flagging the possibility of profit-taking into year-end in a market that can turn quickly when liquidity is light. Reuters

Reuters also pointed to the broader macro support: expectations for further easing in 2026, a softer dollar tone, and ongoing geopolitical uncertainty—conditions that tend to favor non-yielding precious metals when real yields are falling or expected to fall.

Flows and “small market” dynamics: why silver can gap and spike

Silver can move faster than gold because it is a smaller, more flow-sensitive market. Reuters noted that silver exchange-traded product inflows have surpassed 4,000 tons, citing Standard Chartered analyst Suki Cooper—a flow signal that helps explain why price discovery can feel “one-way” when momentum traders and allocators pile in simultaneously. Reuters

That said, Reuters also quoted Rhona O’Connell of StoneX warning that once today’s “febrile” environment cools, silver can decouple and potentially underperform—an important reminder that silver’s upside phases can be followed by sharp reversals. Reuters

StoneX’s own weekly metals commentary echoed that volatility risk, emphasizing silver’s “capricious” nature and warning that when momentum fades, declines can be sudden—especially after a self-reinforcing run-up. StoneX

How the latest silver surge connects to PSLV pricing

When silver rips higher, PSLV investors should watch two moving pieces at once:

  1. The metal’s price (spot/futures)
  2. PSLV’s discount/premium to NAV

Reuters’ explainer on how silver trades highlights why these distinctions matter: silver pricing is influenced by the OTC London market, futures (including CME’s COMEX), and exchange-traded products that can attract rapid inflows. It also noted that London vaults held 27,187 tons of silver as of end-November 2025—a key data point for the “inventory tightness” narrative frequently cited in this rally. Reuters

Because PSLV is currently at a discount, investors aren’t facing the “overpaying versus NAV” risk that can arise in premium regimes—but discounts can widen, particularly if risk appetite fades or if silver pulls back sharply. Sprott+1

Broader market backdrop: year-end liquidity is a factor

Silver’s move didn’t happen in isolation. Reuters described Friday’s U.S. equity session as light-volume and close to record levels overall, with investors watching the “Santa Claus rally” window and acknowledging that thin trading can exaggerate moves. Ryan Detrick, chief market strategist at Carson Group, told Reuters the market was “catching our breath” after a strong run—language that fits well with what commodity traders often see in late-December conditions. Reuters

For PSLV, thin liquidity matters because volatility in silver can translate into bigger intraday swings in a product that trades like a stock—even when the underlying thesis is simply “own physical silver exposure.”

Mixed 2026 outlook: bullish narratives meet cautionary forecasts

A Wall Street Journal analysis published today framed the silver rally in striking relative terms: an ounce of silver costing more than a barrel of U.S. crude oil, a rare relationship last seen during the COVID-era market distortions. The WSJ also highlighted diverging 2026 expectations—some comparing silver to much higher inflation-adjusted historical peaks, while others warn the rally may be overheated and see potential for a retreat toward $42/oz in 2026.

Separately, StoneX’s outlook stresses that tightness and volatility may persist into early 2026, but it explicitly flags downside risk if the investment impulse fades.

What investors should know before the next session

Because it’s Saturday evening in New York, PSLV cannot be traded until the next regular U.S. market session. Here are the practical items to track before Monday’s open:

1) Watch Sunday-night silver action for gap risk

Even when stocks are closed, silver pricing can update via futures markets when they reopen, which can set up a gap up or down in PSLV at Monday’s open—especially after a historic, headline-driven move.

2) Check PSLV’s updated NAV and discount/premium

Sprott publishes daily NAV and premium/discount figures. With PSLV at a discount as of Friday’s close, investors may focus on whether the discount narrows (supportive) or widens (risk-off signal) when the market reopens.

3) Holiday-week macro catalysts can still move metals

Even late in the year, scheduled macro releases can swing yields and the dollar—inputs that matter for silver. Scotiabank’s calendar lists:

  • Mon, Dec. 29: Pending Home Sales (10:00)
  • Tue, Dec. 30: S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Index (9:00), Chicago PMI (9:45)
  • Wed, Dec. 31: FOMC Meeting Minutes (14:00)
  • Fri, Jan. 2: Construction Spending (10:00)

4) Know the year-end trading schedule

If you’re planning entries/exits around year-end: Investopedia reported a full trading day on New Year’s Eve (Wed., Dec. 31) for stocks, with markets closed on New Year’s Day (Thu., Jan. 1, 2026).

5) Be aware of unit issuance mechanics

PSLV has an “at-the-market” issuance program it can use to sell units and buy physical silver with proceeds, according to a December 11 GlobeNewswire release. This is not a day-to-day trading signal, but it’s part of the plumbing investors should understand during periods of extreme demand. GlobeNewswire

Bottom line for PSLV investors this weekend

PSLV is closing the week at the center of one of the most aggressive silver rallies in modern market memory, with official trust data showing a meaningful discount to NAV even after Friday’s surge.

The near-term setup is straightforward: if silver remains bid when markets reopen, PSLV can continue to track higher—but the risk side is equally clear. Multiple strategists cited by Reuters and StoneX emphasize that thin year-end liquidity and momentum-driven positioning can produce sharp reversals, making entry discipline (and monitoring NAV discounts) especially important.

Stock Market Today

  • SEC Approves Nasdaq Prediction Market Options Tied to Nasdaq-100 Index
    May 1, 2026, 5:23 PM EDT. The U.S. SEC has approved Nasdaq MRX's proposal to list and trade new binary options linked to the Nasdaq-100 and Nasdaq-100 Micro indexes. These cash-settled contracts pay a fixed $100 if the index finishes above or below a set level, offering investors a yes-or-no bet on market outcomes. Nasdaq's approval marks a significant step in legitimizing prediction markets, which allow betting on real-world event results and open new revenue avenues. Nasdaq's peers like Cboe Global Markets plan similar offerings targeting financial and economic event contracts. The SEC granted accelerated approval, finding the proposal consistent with regulatory standards.

Latest article

Kraft Heinz Stock Alert: Vanguard’s 5.34% Stake Puts KHC In Focus Before Earnings

1 May 2026
PITTSBURGH, May 1, 2026, 17:03 EDT Vanguard Capital Management disclosed a 5.34% passive stake in The Kraft Heinz Company, putting one of the food maker’s biggest outside holdings in view less than a week before its first-quarter earnings. A Schedule 13G signed April 30 showed Vanguard Capital Management beneficially owned 63,268,818 Kraft Heinz shares. The filing listed sole voting power over 8,724,858 shares and sole power to dispose of 63,268,818 shares. A Schedule 13G is a U.S. ownership filing generally used by large investors who are not seeking control. That matters now because Kraft Heinz is due to release first-quarter
Why Zscaler Stock Jumped Today Despite a Wall Street Target Cut

Why Zscaler Stock Jumped Today Despite a Wall Street Target Cut

1 May 2026
Zscaler shares climbed 7% to $139.81 Friday despite a price-target cut by Citizens JMP to $210. The move followed a sector rally after Atlassian raised its forecast. Zscaler reported 26% revenue growth last quarter and expanded AI security features in its GovCloud product. Customers remain cautious on large deals, with longer approval times noted.
Xanadu Quantum Technologies Stock Gets First Big Test as Q1 Results Date Lands

Xanadu Quantum Technologies Stock Gets First Big Test as Q1 Results Date Lands

1 May 2026
Xanadu Quantum Technologies will report first-quarter results May 14, its first earnings since going public last month. Shares closed at $36.12 Friday, up $7.05, with 4.28 million traded. The company posted a $70.7 million net loss in 2025 and raised $302 million via a SPAC merger. Investors will watch the call for updates on spending, cash runway, and funding prospects.
NuScale Power Stock (NYSE: SMR) Slides Into the Weekend After a Sharp Selloff — What’s Driving the Move, Latest Analyst Targets, and What to Watch Monday
Previous Story

NuScale Power Stock (NYSE: SMR) Slides Into the Weekend After a Sharp Selloff — What’s Driving the Move, Latest Analyst Targets, and What to Watch Monday

Zeta Global Holdings Corp (ZETA) Stock Jumps on Heavy Options Activity — Analyst Targets, Fresh Commentary, and What to Watch Before Monday’s Open
Next Story

Zeta Global Holdings Corp (ZETA) Stock Jumps on Heavy Options Activity — Analyst Targets, Fresh Commentary, and What to Watch Before Monday’s Open

Go toTop