Silver Price Forecast 2026: $80 And $90 Now The Key Battle Lines

Published: Mar 9, 2026 09:27
Silver prices steadied into the end of the week, with the metal recovering modestly after the sharp swings seen earlier in March.

Published: Mar 7, 2026 at 12:00 

Silver prices steadied into the end of the week, with the metal recovering modestly after the sharp swings seen earlier in March.

Live XAG/USD quotes were around $84.19 per ounce, leaving the silver price about 1.7% higher on the day.

Daily data show silver closing Friday near $84.40, rebounding from Thursday’s $82.83 close but still well below the $95.85 peak reached at the start of the month.

The latest move suggests the market is attempting to stabilise after a period of unusually violent price action.

Even so, the metal remains almost 10% lower for March so far after the early-month sell-off.

The broader context remains constructive.

Silver surged more than 10% in February and almost 20% in January, extending a powerful rally that has been building since late 2025.

What Is Driving Silver’s Volatility?

 

Analysts say the sharp swings seen in early March were primarily driven by positioning rather than a sudden shift in the metal’s long-term fundamentals.

Silver tends to move more aggressively than gold because of its smaller market size and heavier speculative participation.

When investor sentiment changes quickly, the metal often exaggerates those moves.

Foreign exchange and commodity desks say that the early-March drop was amplified by profit-taking after January and February’s powerful rally.

Several analysts noted that large speculative positions had built up during the surge above $90 and $95.

Once the price started falling, stop-loss orders accelerated the decline.

The recovery later in the week reflects bargain-hunting as well as stabilisation in broader risk markets.

Gold’s steadier performance has also helped anchor the silver market after the earlier liquidation phase.

From a macro perspective, precious metals continue to be supported by expectations that interest rates will eventually trend lower, while persistent geopolitical uncertainty has kept demand for defensive assets elevated.

 

Bank Outlooks for Silver

 

Despite the recent volatility, most major banks remain broadly constructive on silver over the medium term.

J.P. Morgan expects the silver market to remain structurally supported by strong industrial demand and ongoing supply constraints.

The bank forecasts an average silver price near $81 in 2026, while noting that the metal can overshoot those levels during periods of strong investor inflows.

Deutsche Bank takes a more bullish stance and has highlighted the possibility of silver reaching around $100 by the end of the year if the precious-metals complex continues to strengthen.

The bank argues that silver often outperforms gold in the later stages of a metals bull cycle.

UBS has also stressed that supply deficits and robust demand from solar energy, electronics and electrification technologies are likely to remain important drivers of the market.

Analysts there say that even after the recent correction, silver’s long-term fundamentals remain supportive.

Other strategists warn that volatility will remain elevated.

Because silver sits at the intersection of both industrial and investment demand, it can behave partly like a commodity and partly like a financial asset.

That dual role means price swings are often larger than those seen in gold.

Key Technical Levels to Watch

 

From a technical perspective, the most important near-term level lies in the $81 to $83 range.

That zone has now become the first support area after the latest rebound.

If silver can hold above this band, traders will view the recent sell-off as a temporary correction rather than a trend reversal.

On the downside, a break below $80 would likely bring renewed selling pressure and could expose the late-February support zone in the mid-$70s.

On the upside, resistance sits around $90.

A move back above that level would signal that the market has regained bullish momentum and could reopen a test of the early-March highs near $96.

For now, silver appears to be entering a consolidation phase after an extremely volatile start to the month.

The broader bull trend that began in late 2025 remains intact, but the market is likely to remain sensitive to shifts in the dollar, interest-rate expectations and investor positioning.

Traders therefore expect the coming weeks to be defined by sharp swings around key technical levels rather than a smooth directional move.

Source: https://www.exchangerates.org.uk/news/45420/2026-03-07-silver-price-forecast-2026-80-and-90-dollars-now-key-battle-lines.html

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