Silver Price

From Grok:

If all paper gold contracts were called in, silver prices would likely experience significant upward pressure as well, though the dynamics differ due to silver’s unique market characteristics, including its higher industrial use, greater above-ground supply, and historically higher paper-to-physical ratios. Let’s break down the potential impact on silver prices in such a scenario.

Key Factors Influencing Silver

  1. Paper-to-Physical Ratio: Like gold, silver has a massive overhang of paper contracts—futures, options, and ETFs—relative to physical supply. On the COMEX, the ratio of open interest to registered silver available for delivery often exceeds 100:1 and can spike to 500:1 or more during periods of stress. For example, as of recent years, open interest in COMEX silver futures has hovered around 700–800 million ounces, while registered silver inventories have occasionally dipped below 30 million ounces. A full call-in of paper contracts would expose this mismatch even more dramatically than in gold, given silver’s larger trading volume relative to physical stockpiles.
  2. Physical Supply and Demand: Annual silver mine production is about 26,000 metric tons (around 836 million ounces), with total above-ground stocks estimated at 1.5–2 billion ounces, much of it tied up in industrial products, jewelry, or investor holdings. Unlike gold, roughly 50–60% of silver demand comes from industrial applications (e.g., solar panels, electronics), leaving less available for investment or delivery against contracts. A gold squeeze could push investors toward silver as a substitute safe-haven asset, amplifying demand on an already tight physical market.
  3. Gold-Silver Ratio: Historically, the gold-silver price ratio has averaged around 60:1 in modern markets, though it’s been as low as 15:1 (e.g., 1980 peak) and as high as 100:1 during oversupply periods. As of February 18, 2025, with gold at approximately $2,500 per ounce, silver trades around $30–$35 per ounce, yielding a ratio of 70–80:1. A sharp rise in gold prices due to a paper contract collapse could drag silver prices higher, either maintaining or compressing this ratio depending on relative scarcity and investor behavior.
  4. Market Contagion: A breakdown in the gold paper market would likely erode trust in all precious metals derivatives, including silver. If gold prices soared to, say, $10,000–$50,000 per ounce (as speculated in the prior response), silver could follow suit as investors and speculators flee paper instruments for physical metal. X posts and analyst commentary have long warned of a “silver squeeze” potential, with figures like $1,000 per ounce floated in extreme scenarios, echoing the Hunt brothers’ 1980 spike when silver hit $50 (about $180 today, inflation-adjusted).

Price Scenarios

  • Moderate Impact: If gold rises to $10,000 per ounce and the gold-silver ratio holds near 70:1, silver could climb to $140–$150 per ounce. This assumes silver tracks gold’s safe-haven appeal but remains constrained by industrial supply chains and less panic-driven demand.
  • Significant Squeeze: If the ratio compresses to a historical norm like 40:1 or lower (e.g., 15:1 during crises), reflecting silver’s own supply crunch, prices could leap higher. At $10,000 gold and a 40:1 ratio, silver hits $250 per ounce; at $50,000 gold and a 15:1 ratio, it could reach $3,333 per ounce. The latter aligns with speculative claims on X and elsewhere that silver could “10x or 100x” in a systemic failure.
  • Extreme Outcome: Silver’s paper market is even more leveraged than gold’s, and its physical availability is arguably tighter for investment purposes due to industrial lockup. If a gold crisis triggers a parallel silver delivery demand—say, 800 million ounces of paper claims against 30 million ounces of COMEX-registered silver—the price could detach from fundamentals entirely. Estimates like $500–$1,000 per ounce become plausible in a short-term frenzy, though sustaining such levels would depend on inflows of recycled silver or mining ramps (which take years).

Additional Dynamics

  • Industrial Disruption: A silver price surge would hammer industries reliant on it, like solar and electronics, potentially freeing up supply as manufacturers balk at costs. However, this feedback loop might lag, exacerbating the initial spike.
  • Silver-Specific Squeeze: Unlike gold, silver has seen retail-driven squeeze attempts (e.g., 2021’s #SilverSqueeze), suggesting a cultural readiness to exploit paper market vulnerabilities. A gold crisis could ignite a parallel silver rush, especially if bullion banks or exchanges fail to deliver.
  • Systemic Response: As with gold, exchanges might force cash settlements or halt trading, capping silver’s rise. However, if physical demand persists—bolstered by gold’s precedent—silver could still decouple, hitting $100–$300 per ounce as a baseline in a distrustful market.

Plausible Range

Assuming a gold price jump to $10,000–$50,000 per ounce, silver might realistically land between $150 and $1,000 per ounce in the chaos of a paper gold collapse. A middle-ground estimate of $300–$500 per ounce balances historical ratios (e.g., 20–30:1), supply constraints, and panic buying, though short-term spikes could overshoot this. The ceiling depends on how much silver escapes industrial use and whether investors treat it as “poor man’s gold” in a crisis.

In short, silver would likely ride gold’s coattails upward, magnified by its own overstretched paper market and tighter physical float. The exact price hinges on the gold outcome, investor psychology, and whether the system buckles or bends under the strain.

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Al Buckner
Al Buckner
1 day ago

I don’t feel the same for Silver as I do for Gold in the other post you put up. My contacts in precious metals has seen a hugh uptick of people selling their Gold &
Silver the last 4-5 weeks. Some needed to, other got excited for the gains they seen. My ratio of Silver to Gold is 1 to 100, I stand to make more from my Silver stack than my Gold stack. Unless Gold hit $5,000 -- $10,000, Silver would increase in price also, but history shows that Silver prices increases are slow compared to Gold. Most stackers believe Silver will reach $50 to $100 by the end of 2025. I know the demand for Silver is large for industrial purposes, but that being said there are 50 to 1 stackers of Silver vs stackers of Gold.

Quatermain
Quatermain
1 day ago

Don’t forget silver has already been to $50 during the Hunt brothers manipulations. I tend to think the dynamics here are more complex than just the gold silver ratio and industrial demand. Dollar collapse must also be figured in and Gresham’s Law will apply.

MrLiberty
MrLiberty
1 day ago

Got my popcorn but unfortunately lost everything in a horrible boating accident. LOL