SILVER, often overshadowed by its glamorous cousin gold, is quietly reclaiming attention in global markets. In a world navigating inflationary pressures, clean energy transitions, and shifting central bank priorities, silver is once again standing at the crossroads of industry and investment.
Unlike gold, which thrives purely on sentiment, silver’s strength lies in its dual character – part safe-haven, part industrial powerhouse. And that makes its story in 2025 uniquely compelling. Silver isn’t just a mirror of gold; it’s a mirror of the economy, capturing its rare balance between risk hedge and growth proxy.
Fundamentally, silver’s supply-demand equation is tightening. Global mine production has plateaued amid rising extraction costs and reduced by-product output from base-metal mines. At the same time, photovoltaic demand is set to hit another record in 2025, with China’s renewable push alone expected to absorb nearly a quarter of annual global supply. This imbalance hints that the market may be under-pricing silver’s long-term scarcity. Add that to silver’s high-beta temperament with its wild swings and outsized moves relative to gold. Conditions may be setting up for a breakout that is both technical and fundamental.
Silver’s prolonged consolidation phase within an ascending channel between February 2024 and August 2025 (blue) laid the groundwork for its latest breakout. The surge beyond the US$40 mark wasn’t just psychological – it signalled a strong technical breakout. If we project the same channel elevation of roughly US$9 per ounce, silver’s trajectory points towards the US$49-US$50 zone, a level that now looks both technically justified and sentimentally charged.
Technically, silver is once again testing the psychological US$50 mark. The metal’s two previous brushes with glory are etched in market history: in January 1980, when the Hunt Brothers’ speculative frenzy drove prices to US$49.45 an ounce; and once again in April 2011, when post-crisis liquidity and inflation fears pushed silver to US$49.82 an ounce. This time, however, the drivers look more grounded in reality as the global green transition rewrites the demand story, from solar panels and electric vehicles to next-generation electronics.
A decisive close above US$50 could ignite another leg higher. However, the Relative Strength Index, which is flashing extreme overbought levels, warns of potential volatility and the risk of short-term pullbacks. Interestingly, with gold soaring beyond US$4,000 and appearing expensive for incremental investments, some portfolio flows could pivot towards silver as the next logical beneficiary of the precious metals rally. For investors, the message is clear – silver’s path may not be linear, but in an environment defined by central bank easing, inflation hedging, and portfolio diversification, the metal’s risk-reward equation remains compelling.
I strongly believe silver is not just attempting to revisit US$50; it is also preparing to mark a new all-time high driven by sustainability, scarcity, and sentiment converging in one potent mix. Historically, in bullish cycles, silver tends to outperform gold once gold stabilises, owing to its industrial beta. For investors looking beyond short-term noise, silver’s hybrid DNA, as both an inflation hedge and a proxy for green-energy growth, presents a rare and attractive value proposition.
For portfolios willing to embrace its swings, silver’s current outlook looks increasingly appealing in a world defined by rate cuts, currency shifts, and inflation expectations.
The writer is senior market analyst at Phillip Nova