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Silver's $60 Breakout Resets The Goldsilver Balance
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Key Points
1. Silver has smashed through $60 per ounce for the first time, trading near $61–61.5 with record highs across major futures markets.
2. A five-year supply deficit, booming demand from industry and AI-driven data centres, and heavy ETF inflows have turned a tight market into a stampede.
3. The gold–silver ratio has tumbled from near 100 earlier this year to about 68, while technical signals scream“overbought” from 4-hour charts to the monthly view.
Silver is trading around $61 a troy ounce this morning after clearing the $60 barrier and briefly touching fresh highs near $61.5 overnight.
COMEX futures mirror the move, while Indian contracts in rupees and Shanghai prices in yuan are also sitting at or near records, underlining that this is a genuinely global breakout rather than a single-exchange anomaly.
Behind the fireworks lies a structural squeeze years in the making. Global demand for silver – from solar panels, electric vehicles, power electronics and now AI-heavy data centres – has outpaced mine supply for roughly half a decade.
Because most silver is produced as a by-product of other metals, miners have not rushed to flood the market.
London's key vaults were forced to import large volumes from New York and Asia after a sharp drawdown in October, while inventories in China and India remain lean despite recent restocking.
Silver's $60 Breakout Resets The Gold–Silver Balance
Investment flows have piled on. The largest silver ETF has attracted more than a billion dollars in recent weeks, lifting holdings to almost 16,000 tonnes and assets above $30 billion.
For many savers wary of loose fiscal policy and politicised central banking, silver now looks like a straightforward, market-priced hedge rather than a speculative toy.
The gold–silver ratio gives a stark benchmark. Earlier in 2025, one ounce of gold bought almost 100 ounces of silver; today, with gold around $4,200 and silver above $61, that ratio is close to 68.
Long-term averages sit nearer 50–60, suggesting silver has clawed back a huge valuation gap but has not yet reached historic“expensive” extremes.
Technicals, however, show a market running hot. On 4-hour and daily charts, prices ride the upper Bollinger band, MACD has turned higher again and RSI is deep in overbought territory, with weekly readings also stretched.
After six sessions capped just below $60, silver has burst into a near-parabolic ascent. If rate-cut hopes or industrial demand disappoint, the same disciplined investors now riding the trend may quickly demand a reality check.
1. Silver has smashed through $60 per ounce for the first time, trading near $61–61.5 with record highs across major futures markets.
2. A five-year supply deficit, booming demand from industry and AI-driven data centres, and heavy ETF inflows have turned a tight market into a stampede.
3. The gold–silver ratio has tumbled from near 100 earlier this year to about 68, while technical signals scream“overbought” from 4-hour charts to the monthly view.
Silver is trading around $61 a troy ounce this morning after clearing the $60 barrier and briefly touching fresh highs near $61.5 overnight.
COMEX futures mirror the move, while Indian contracts in rupees and Shanghai prices in yuan are also sitting at or near records, underlining that this is a genuinely global breakout rather than a single-exchange anomaly.
Behind the fireworks lies a structural squeeze years in the making. Global demand for silver – from solar panels, electric vehicles, power electronics and now AI-heavy data centres – has outpaced mine supply for roughly half a decade.
Because most silver is produced as a by-product of other metals, miners have not rushed to flood the market.
London's key vaults were forced to import large volumes from New York and Asia after a sharp drawdown in October, while inventories in China and India remain lean despite recent restocking.
Silver's $60 Breakout Resets The Gold–Silver Balance
Investment flows have piled on. The largest silver ETF has attracted more than a billion dollars in recent weeks, lifting holdings to almost 16,000 tonnes and assets above $30 billion.
For many savers wary of loose fiscal policy and politicised central banking, silver now looks like a straightforward, market-priced hedge rather than a speculative toy.
The gold–silver ratio gives a stark benchmark. Earlier in 2025, one ounce of gold bought almost 100 ounces of silver; today, with gold around $4,200 and silver above $61, that ratio is close to 68.
Long-term averages sit nearer 50–60, suggesting silver has clawed back a huge valuation gap but has not yet reached historic“expensive” extremes.
Technicals, however, show a market running hot. On 4-hour and daily charts, prices ride the upper Bollinger band, MACD has turned higher again and RSI is deep in overbought territory, with weekly readings also stretched.
After six sessions capped just below $60, silver has burst into a near-parabolic ascent. If rate-cut hopes or industrial demand disappoint, the same disciplined investors now riding the trend may quickly demand a reality check.
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