Silver Reaches All-Time Highs, Eyes Continued Ascent Amidst Chinese Demand and Global Monetary Shifts

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Silver futures have achieved a remarkable milestone, climbing to an all-time high of $75 per ounce. This extraordinary surge represents the metal's most robust monthly and annual performance since the late 1970s, a period famously marked by the Hunt brothers' attempt to corner the silver market. The primary catalyst behind this meteoric rise appears to be a critical scarcity of physical silver in China, where an intense retail purchasing spree has overwhelmed constrained supply chains, propelling prices to unprecedented levels.

This quarter, COMEX silver, as benchmarked by the iShares Silver Trust, has recorded an impressive appreciation of approximately 30%. This positions it for its strongest monthly gain in decades, a performance not witnessed since December 1979. Over the course of the year, the metal has experienced an even more dramatic increase, accumulating nearly 155% in value, once again mirroring the extraordinary market dynamics of the late 1970s. The Kobeissi Letter, a prominent financial commentary on social media platform X, emphasized the severity of the situation, stating, “China is facing a literal shortage of physical silver,” highlighting the rapid tightening of market conditions in the world's largest silver-consuming nation.

Recent reports from Bloomberg shed light on the extreme speculative fervor gripping China's investment landscape in response to the silver rally. The UBS SDIC Silver Futures Fund LOF, China's only dedicated silver fund, announced a halt to new subscriptions for certain shares. This decision followed multiple risk advisories that failed to dampen the speculative enthusiasm. Fund management expressed concerns about potential significant losses for investors should the record-breaking bull market experience a downturn. At one point during the week, the fund traded at a premium exceeding 60% compared to the value of its underlying assets, which consist of silver contracts on the Shanghai Futures Exchange.

Social media played a pivotal role in this phenomenon, with platforms like Xiaohongshu (also known as Rednote) becoming conduits for arbitrage tutorials. These guides attracted a massive influx of retail traders into the fund, leading to the product hitting its 10% daily limit for three consecutive days. This prompted UBS SDIC to severely restrict new subscriptions. Despite subsequent pullbacks, the fund's premium remains substantially higher than its early December levels. The UBS SDIC silver fund has now seen a 187% increase this year, significantly outperforming the roughly 145% gains in Shanghai-traded silver futures, underscoring the extreme nature of this retail-driven surge.

With silver consistently trading above $70 and briefly touching $75, the question of whether the rally is sustainable inevitably arises. Robert Kiyosaki, the renowned author of "Rich Dad Poor Dad," suggests that this might only be the beginning. In a post on X, Kiyosaki posited that a $200 silver price by 2026 is a plausible outcome, framing the current upward trend as an integral part of a larger structural transformation rather than a fleeting speculative peak. He remarked, "If you think silver is at an all-time high then you're too late," adding that he continues to accumulate silver at $70 an ounce.

Ramnivas Mundada, director of Economic Research at GlobalData, further elaborates that the 2025 surge in precious metals signifies a profound transformation within the global monetary architecture. Mundada noted, "This rally marks the beginning of a structural shift away from a U.S.-centric framework toward a more multipolar order." He attributes this shift to a confluence of factors including geopolitical instability, a deceleration in the U.S. economy, escalating trade frictions, and an accelerating trend of de-dollarization. From a fundamental perspective, Mundada emphasizes robust industrial demand, particularly from the solar panel and electric vehicle sectors, predicting that silver prices could potentially reach $85–$100 per ounce as structural deficits continue to expand. The benefits, he points out, include wealth preservation and diversification against systemic risks, while the risks encompass the potential for sharp, sentiment-driven corrections and increasing input costs across various technology supply chains.

Irrespective of whether silver consolidates, corrects, or extends its historic climb into the new year, one truth remains: the metal has firmly re-established its central position in global markets. This resurgence is fueled by a powerful combination of escalating industrial demand, pervasive monetary uncertainty, and vigorous retail speculation, particularly within China, as the world navigates its way into an increasingly fragmented and multipolar financial era.

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