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Silver Achieves Record Milestone Beyond US$60, Driven by Policy Shifts and Supply Constraints
Silver broke through the US$60 per ounce barrier this week, marking an unprecedented price level and cementing the metal’s outperformance versus its traditional counterpart gold. The white metal has now climbed approximately 100 percent year-to-date, significantly outpacing gold’s 59 percent gain and reshaping precious metals dynamics in 2025.
Policy Expectations and Rate Cut Catalysts
The surge in silver prices is fundamentally anchored to shifting monetary policy expectations. The U.S. Federal Reserve is slated to conclude its December meeting on Wednesday, with market participants now pricing in a high probability of an interest rate reduction. Silver and gold both benefit from lower interest rate environments, as reduced yields on alternative assets make non-yielding precious metals more attractive to investors.
Contributing to this momentum is anticipation around the Fed’s leadership transition. While President Trump has not officially announced the next Fed chair, sources indicate Kevin Hassett, director of the White House’s National Economic Council, is the leading candidate. Hassett’s public comments suggest a preference for monetary conditions that support “cheaper car loans and easier access to mortgages,” signaling a potentially more dovish policy stance that would be supportive of precious metals.
Supply Pressures and Industrial Demand
Beyond monetary factors, silver’s rally has been underpinned by structural supply-demand imbalances. Chinese silver stockpiles have reached their lowest level in a decade following substantial shipments to London, according to recent reporting. This inventory tightening coincides with elevated U.S. interest in silver as a critical mineral, introducing geopolitical considerations into pricing dynamics.
On the demand side, industrial consumption remains robust. The Silver Institute reported that industrial demand reached a record 680.5 million ounces in 2024, driven primarily by grid infrastructure modernization, electric vehicle production, and photovoltaic expansion. Despite total silver demand declining 3 percent year-over-year in 2024, the market continued running a deficit—supply fell short by 148.9 million ounces for the year, marking the fourth consecutive year of undersupply.
Market Dynamics and Forward Outlook
Silver’s performance has also benefited from improved liquidity conditions in the London market, where earlier constraints have largely resolved. The metal’s volatility and leverage characteristics mean that when trends establish themselves, percentage gains often exceed those of gold—a pattern that is currently playing out in 2025.
Looking ahead, market participants are divided on whether silver’s outperformance will persist. Industry observers, including analysts from VRIC Media, argue that precious metals cycles consistently reward silver investors with larger absolute gains relative to gold, suggesting the current momentum could extend through 2026.
Gold, meanwhile, remains elevated above US$4,200 per ounce but has not reached its all-time high, highlighting silver’s relative strength. The divergence between these two precious metals provides a lens into how investors are perceiving both monetary policy and industrial growth trajectories.
As December’s Fed decision approaches and questions around central bank leadership continue circulating, silver’s newfound price discovery above US$60 may represent just one chapter in a longer narrative of precious metals reassessment in the current macroeconomic environment.