Every investor eventually buys one thing not for the upside but for the comfort. It is the asset you tuck away so you can sleep through a bad headline, the one that is supposed to hold its value when stocks wobble, when inflation bites, when the dollar feels shaky. For a generation of savers, precious metals have played that role. They are the financial equivalent of a fire extinguisher, boring until the day you are grateful you own one.
For most of the past 18 months, that fire extinguisher looked like the best trade on the board. A historic rally pulled money out of savings accounts and into coins, bars, and exchange-traded funds, fueled by safe-haven demand, a weaker dollar, and a supply squeeze tied to solar panels and artificial-intelligence hardware. Retail investors who had never owned an ounce suddenly had a position. Financial advisers who had ignored the sector for years started fielding calls.
Then the comfort trade stopped being comfortable. Silver, the metal millions bought precisely because it was supposed to protect them, has fallen more than 50% from its record high and just slid to a fresh six-month low, leaving anyone who bought near the top staring at a loss that no fire extinguisher was supposed to allow.
Silver has crashed below $60, a six-month low and 50% off its record.
Yanleth Rivera / Getty Images
How silver became the market’s hottest trade
To understand how unsettling this drop feels, you have to remember how good the run was. Silver climbed to a record high above $120 an ounce in late January 2026, posting a gain of roughly 150% for 2025 alone, one of the most violent bull markets any major asset produced this decade, according to Yahoo Finance.
More Gold and Silver:
- Bank of America has stark message for silver investors in 2026
- Goldman Sachs revisits its gold price target after Fed decision
- Silver price hits new low, here is what comes next
The pitch was easy to believe because silver wears two hats. It is a precious metal investors run to when they are scared, and it is an industrial metal that goes into solar panels, electronics, and the data centers powering artificial intelligence. Demand from those buyers collided with worries that China, a top producer, would curb exports, and prices went vertical.
By late December, silver briefly touched $80 an ounce. Not everyone was convinced it could last. “When it gets this stretched, be careful,” Bloomberg Intelligence senior commodity strategist Mike McGlone said, urging bulls to take profits before the move unwound.
What is dragging silver prices lower now
The unwind, when it came, was brutal. Spot silver fell 3.7% to $59.30 an ounce on Wednesday, June 24, its lowest level since Dec. 9, 2025, and its first trip below $60 this year, according to Stockwits. That marks a fresh six-month low and leaves the metal down more than 50% from its peak, according to Seeking Alpha.
The trigger was not exotic. A blowout jobs report landed on June 6, with employers adding 172,000 jobs, more than double the 85,000 economists expected, according to Finance Magnates. The payrolls data comes from the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Related: HSBC resets silver price target for the rest of 2026
Strong hiring did to silver what strong hiring always does. It pushed traders to bet on higher interest rates, lifted Treasury yields, and strengthened the dollar, and all three raise the cost of holding an asset that pays no income. The Federal Reserve held its benchmark rate at 3.5% to 3.75% on June 17, its fourth straight hold, and nine of 18 policymakers now project at least one rate hike before year-end, according to Fox Business.
That is a stark turn from the rate cuts markets expected at the start of the year, and silver felt it first. The metal closed below its 200-day moving average on June 9, its first break of that line since April 2025, a signal chart watchers treat as a regime change rather than a dip, according to Finance Magnates.
When I lined silver’s collapse up against the calendar, the timing told the whole story. The metal did not crater because anyone stopped needing it in a solar panel or a server rack. It cratered because the price of insurance went up the moment the Fed’s next move flipped from a cut to a possible hike.
What the silver sell-off means for your money
For ordinary investors, the pain shows up in the products they actually hold. The iShares Silver Trust (SLV) has dropped more than 15% in 2026, while the SPDR Gold Shares fund (GLD) has fallen about 7%, and silver miners First Majestic (AG), Hecla Mining (HL), and Pan American Silver Corp. (PAAS) each slid nearly 4% in premarket trading, according to Stockwits. Anyone who used 2x or 3x silver funds to chase the rally found out how fast those products erase a year of gains.
Here is the round trip in four numbers:
- Silver hit a record high above $120 an ounce in late January 2026, capping a run of roughly 150% the year before, according to Yahoo Finance.
- The metal closed below its 200-day moving average on June 9, its first such break since April 2025, according to Finance Magnates.
- Spot silver fell below $60 an ounce on June 24 for the first time this year, its weakest level since Dec. 9, 2025, according to Stockwits.
- JPMorgan’s 2026 forecast range for silver still runs from $60 to $90 an ounce, according to Finance Magnates.
What I keep coming back to is the uncomfortable lesson sitting inside those figures. Silver was sold to a lot of people as protection against exactly this kind of inflationary, uncertain stretch, and it has shed half its value while inflation was still running hot.
A hedge that falls apart at the moment you reach for it is not really a hedge. It is a bet wearing safer clothes.
The bulls are not gone. Silver’s drop has stayed orderly rather than turning into a panic, and “I see very limited downside after such a massive decline and expect huge upside,” RM Capital Consulting founder Rashad Hajiyev wrote on X. Investor Peter Schiff argued that markets are pricing in rate hikes that may never arrive, which he sees as fuel for a rebound in metals once the fear fades.
The bears point at the chart. Technical analysts have flagged support near $55 and $46 an ounce, with some projections pointing all the way to $30 if those floors give way, according to Finance Magnates.
The next few economic prints will decide which side is right. If inflation keeps climbing and the Fed follows through on the hikes its own projections now show, silver’s biggest enemy stays parked in the room. If the labor market cracks and rate cuts return to the table, the same metal that just halved could find a bottom in a hurry. Either way, the people who bought silver so they would stop worrying about the market are now watching it as closely as any stock they own.
Related: Robert Kiyosaki makes stunning prediction on gold and silver prices