Silver ended 2025 in a state of sharp oscillation after a blistering rally that saw the metal outperform gold by a wide margin. Prices opened at around Rs 2.21 lakh per kilogram on the final trading day, down from the previous close of Rs 2.51 lakh. On the international market, COMEX silver tumbled to an intraday low near $71.97, after hitting an all time high of $83.62 on 29 December.
Why silver volatility spiked
Traders pointed to three immediate catalysts for the abrupt reversal. First, the Chicago Mercantile Exchange raised margin requirements for silver futures multiple times in December, including a $3,000 increase for the most active March 2026 contract that lifted initial margins to $25,000. The sudden requirement forced leveraged participants to pare back positions and accelerated selling.
Second, reduced speculative exposure amplified the decline. Analysts say the sell off reflected position unwinding more than a collapse in physical demand. “The margin changes compelled leveraged traders to reduce exposure after prices became technically overstretched,” said Jigar Trivedi, senior research analyst at Reliance Securities. The result was a swift contraction in open interest as traders exited at the peak.
Third, profit taking at the top compounded the move. After the metal set record highs on both COMEX and MCX, a wave of selling by short term holders pushed futures down sharply. On MCX, silver futures fell by about Rs 21,000 in a single session, while COMEX contracts dropped nearly 11 percent intraday before staging a partial recovery toward the mid $70s.
Despite the volatility, the longer term story for silver remains constructive. For 2025 the white metal recorded gains of roughly 140 percent, its strongest annual performance on record. By comparison, gold rose nearly 66 percent over the same period. The white metal has benefitted from strong industrial demand, ongoing supply constraints and shifts in investor positioning.
China’s policy moves have added another layer of price risk. Reports of export restrictions from China, a major source of refined silver and related industrial inputs, have heightened concerns over availability. Combined with existing supply tightness, such measures can sustain price gains even after episodic corrections.
Market participants will watch three variables closely as 2026 begins: margin policies at exchanges, speculative flows into futures, and physical demand from industry, particularly in electronics and solar sectors. If margins stabilise and speculative interest returns, volatility could persist but the overall trend may remain upward given the constrained supply picture.
In the near term, traders should expect wide intraday swings as positions adjust to new margin rules and as participants assess the impact of China’s export measures. For investors focused on fundamentals, the combination of industrial demand and supply compression provides a rationale for a cautiously bullish outlook on silver prices in 2026.
Key Takeaways:
- Silver volatility pushed prices to record highs in 2025, with India seeing gains of about 140% while gold rose roughly 66%.
- CME margin hikes forced leveraged traders to cut positions, prompting a rapid correction from $83.62/oz to the low $70s.
- Profit taking and reduced speculative exposure drove the intraday sell-off, though industrial demand and supply constraints support a bullish outlook.
- China’s impending export restrictions add supply risk that may sustain elevated prices into 2026.

















