Silver ahead of the next surge? Deficit, battery boom & government purchases are heating up the market

Published: Apr 24, 2026 09:24
The global silver market is in a phase that is historically rare in this form: persistent supply deficits, potentially transformative demand from battery technology, government accumulation programs, and a growing decoupling of Asian prices from Western benchmarks. Reason enough to take a closer look at the key developments in detail.

20. April 2026

The global silver market is in a phase that is historically rare in this form: persistent supply deficits, potentially transformative demand from battery technology, government accumulation programs, and a growing decoupling of Asian prices from Western benchmarks. Reason enough to take a closer look at the key developments in detail.

Structural supply deficit – a six-year phenomenon

The fundamental starting point for the silver market is clearly documented. The Silver Institute forecasts a supply deficit of around 67 million ounces for 2026. This would be the sixth consecutive year of a silver deficit. Including the deficit from 2025, the cumulative five-year deficit now exceeds 800 million ounces. That is equivalent to an entire calendar year of global mine production.

On the supply side, global silver production is expected to rise by 1.5% in 2026 to a decade high of 1.05 billion ounces, with mine production estimated at around 820 million ounces. However, this is not sufficient to meet expected demand. As a result, the global silver market will still have to draw down above-ground inventories to close the gap.

On the demand side, the picture is split. Industrial demand is expected to fall by around 2% in 2026 to a four-year low of 650 million ounces, as the photovoltaic industry aggressively reduces the silver content per module to protect manufacturers’ margins. At the same time, investment demand is moving in the opposite direction: physical investment demand is expected to rise by 20% in 2026 to a three-year high of 227 million ounces, as Western retail investors’ demand for silver picks up again after three consecutive years of declines.

Samsung SDI and Toyota: solid-state batteries with substantial silver requirements

One of the most significant potential sources of demand for silver in the coming years lies in the solid-state battery technology developed by Samsung SDI. Each battery cell in Samsung’s solid-state battery contains around five grams of silver, which amounts to roughly one kilogram of silver per vehicle for a typical 100 kWh battery pack. That is a multiple of the silver content in conventional lithium-ion batteries.

At SNE Battery Day 2024 in Seoul, Samsung SDI confirmed that the pilot production line is in operation and that mass production is targeted by 2027. According to Samsung SDI’s vice president, samples have already been delivered to customers and the company has received positive feedback from them.

Calculating the potential impact on the silver market yields substantial figures under a hypothetical adoption scenario. If 20% of the 80 million vehicles produced annually were to adopt this technology—around 16 million vehicles—annual silver demand would increase by roughly 16,000 tonnes.

That would represent a significant share of current global mine production of around 25,000 tonnes per year. However, this scenario is a hypothetical model calculation and not a confirmed volume of demand—scaling issues, cost barriers, and alternative chemical battery compositions without silver could still materially change the figures and thus the expected silver consumption.

India’s silver demand continues to grow despite new import restrictions

In recent years, India has developed into one of the most dynamic silver markets worldwide. Investment demand in India is expected to build on the substantial gains of the previous year in 2026 and continue to rise. This is taking place against the backdrop of an exceptionally positive investor sentiment toward silver.

India’s import data underscore this impressive trend. Silver imports to the subcontinent have recently surged massively, both among institutional investors and retail investors who use silver as a store of value.

At the same time, India’s Directorate General of Foreign Trade (DGFT), effective April 1, 2026, has moved gold, silver and platinum jewelry under customs tariff heading 7113 from the “free import” category to the “restricted import” category. The measure is aimed at tighter management of jewelry imports, while the investment market for physical silver remains unaffected.

Russia views silver as part of its state reserves

Like India, Russia is now explicitly assigning silver a monetary role, as the country has officially announced that it will add silver to its strategic state reserves. This is reflected in published plans by the Russian central bank. Historically, Russia already held significant reserves of platinum and palladium, and now silver is being included as another precious metal in its reserve planning.

In doing so, Russia is following a broader trend within the BRICS countries, in which silver is increasingly viewed as a strategic metal. This revaluation of its importance makes it clear that, beyond its industrial use, silver also has monetary significance.

Source:https://goldinvest.de/en/silver-ahead-of-the-next-surge-deficit-battery-boom-government-purchases-are-heating-up-the-market/

Data Source Statement: Except for publicly available information, all other data are processed by SMM based on publicly available information, market communication, and relying on SMM‘s internal database model. They are for reference only and do not constitute decision-making recommendations.

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