
Jaar | USD | AUD | CAD | CHF | CNY | EUR | GBP | INR | JPY |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2026 | +10,46% | +2,37% | +10,32% | +9,66% | +8,11% | +11,48% | +10,59% | +14,43% | +13,09% |
| 2025 | +53,60% | +134,37% | +141,09% | +120,20% | +140,61% | +122,31% | +135,00% | +165,23% | +151,64% |
| 2024 | +21,70% | +33,20% | +31,90% | +30,80% | +25,50% | +29,20% | +23,50% | +25,00% | +35,70% |
| 2023 | -1,20% | -1,40% | -3,80% | -10,30% | +1,30% | -4,80% | -6,70% | -0,70% | +6,50% |
| 2022 | +2,90% | +9,90% | +10,20% | +4,10% | +11,60% | +9,30% | +15,30% | +14,20% | +17,00% |
| 2021 | -11,50% | -6,20% | -12,10% | -10,00% | -13,90% | -5,60% | -10,50% | -9,80% | -1,30% |
| 2020 | +47,50% | +34,40% | +44,70% | +35,00% | +38,40% | +35,40% | +43,20% | +51,50% | +40,20% |
| 2019 | +15,50% | +16,00% | +9,80% | +13,80% | +16,90% | +19,20% | +11,00% | +18,10% | +14,40% |
Compared to other major assets, Silver outperformed Bitcoin en NASDAQ 100.
Institution Name | 2026 Silver Price Forecast | Outlook |
|---|---|---|
| World Bank | $41,000/oz (annual average price forecast) | Cautious/Conservative |
| HSBC | $44,500/oz (annual average price forecast) | Cautious/Conservative |
| Bank of America | $65,000/oz (December 2026); $50,000/oz (annual average price forecast) | Optimistic |
| Deutsche Bank | $55,000/oz (annual average price forecast) | Optimistic |
| Citibank | $60,000–$72,000/oz | Optimistic |
| Goldman Sachs | $50,000–$60,000/oz | Optimistic |
| UBS | $60,000–$65,000/oz | Optimistic |
| JPMorgan Chase | $56,000/oz (annual average price forecast) | Optimistic |
Influencing Factors | Mechanism | Key Indicators to Monitor | Price Impact Direction |
|---|---|---|---|
| Industrial Demand | Silver is widely used in photovoltaic modules, semiconductors, new energy vehicles, medical devices, and other industries. Industrial demand accounts for a large proportion of its annual total consumption, making it a key driver that distinguishes silver from gold. During periods of economic expansion, increased industrial activity often pushes silver prices higher; during economic contractions, the opposite is true, and the downside pressure on silver prices is usually greater than on gold prices. | PMI (Purchasing Managers Index), IEA (International Energy Agency Photovoltaic Installation Data) | Positive |
| Industrial Metals Correlation | Silver exhibits a significant cyclical correlation with industrial metals such as copper, aluminum, and zinc, as they share the same end demand from manufacturing, electrification, and infrastructure. Copper prices are often regarded as a leading indicator of the global industrial cycle, and their movements have a strong influence on silver prices. In many market scenarios, silver is closer to being "copper among precious metals" rather than a simple substitute for gold. | Copper Price (LME/COMEX) LME (London Metals Exchange Index) | Positive |
| Interest Rate Outlook | Silver is also sensitive to the interest rate outlook, but unlike gold, stronger industrial demand of silver can fully offset or even reverse the pressure from rising rates. It is not uncommon for silver prices to increase during periods of economic expansion when real interest rates are rising. The interest rate outlook is a secondary factor influencing the silver price, and its impact is noticeably weaker than that of the industrial cycle. | CME Fed Watch (rate cut probability), 2Y UST (2-Year U.S. Treasury yield), OIS (Overnight Index Swap expectations) | Two-Way |
| Real Interest Rates | As a non-yielding asset, the silver price is pressured by rising real interest rates. Unlike gold, however, if inflation is accompanied by stronger economic activity, improving industrial demand may partially offset this pressure. If inflation is driven by supply shocks rather than stronger demand, industrial demand may not benefit in tandem, leading to very different outcomes for silver prices. | TIPS (Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities real yield) | Two-Way |
| USD Strength | Silver is priced in US dollars, so a stronger dollar tends to weigh on silver prices. However, silver's pricing is more closely anchored to the industrial metals cycle rather than monetary relationships, so the dollar typically has less influence on the silver price than it does on gold. | DXY (US Dollar Index) | Inverse |
| Gold-Silver Ratio | The gold-silver ratio (the number of ounces of silver that can be swapped for one ounce of gold) reflects their relative valuation. When the ratio is historically high, some investors expect silver to have greater mean reversion potential. Silver tends to outperform gold when risk appetite rises and the overall precious metals rally broadly, but underperforms gold during periods driven by risk aversion. | Spot Gold/Silver Ratio (Real Time) | Two-Way |
| Geopolitical Risk and Safe-Haven Demand | When risk aversion rises, capital typically flows into gold before silver. If a risk event also raises recession concerns, the drag from weaker industrial demand often outweighs safe-haven buying, causing silver prices to fall during crises. When VIX rises, silver does not always benefit from safe-haven demand, as fears of weaker industrial activity may have a greater negative impact. | VIX (Cboe Volatility Index), PMI (Purchasing Managers Index) | Generally Inverse |
| Speculative Positioning and Market Liquidity | The COMEX silver futures market is less liquid than gold. Rapid changes in managed net positions can trigger price swings that exceed what fundamentals alone would justify. CFTC positioning data is therefore highly relevant for short-term price movements, and silver volatility is generally higher than gold volatility. | COT (CFTC Commitments of Traders Report · Silver Net Longs) | Positive |
| Mine Supply Structure | A significant portion of global silver supply comes as a by-product from lead, zinc, and copper mining, while standalone silver mines account for a relatively small percentage. As a result, silver supply is largely influenced by the broader nonferrous metals cycle. However, as demand from areas such as photovoltaics grows rapidly, the long-term narrative around silver is shifting from a supply-side story toward a structurally demand-driven deficit, which may reduce the relevance of this factor over time. | Zinc, Lead, and Copper Production Data | Inverse |
Convert between Silver weight units and currencies based on the current real-time Silver price of $79,173 per ounce.
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