Silver
traded near $58.20 per ounce on Wednesday, July 1, 2026, grinding sideways in
the high-$50s after last week’s break below the $64.50 floor that had capped
the post-record consolidation since December. The white metal (XAG/USD) is down more than 50% from its $121.67
all-time high set on January 29 and has lost roughly 22% in the past month
alone.
The weekly
breakdown is the most consequential technical event of the year for silver, and
both of my charts point lower from here.
Below, I
map both timeframes, the levels that matter, and the point where my bear case
breaks.
Follow
me on X for real-time silver market analysis: @ChmielDk
My weekly
chart shows silver closing below $64.50 for the first time since December,
breaking the support that marked the floor of the entire post-record
consolidation. That level lined up with the 50-week EMA at $64.18, so the
moving average gave way with it, and price is still falling on the breakout.
Broken support now acts as resistance.
The next
objective on this timeframe is the 200-week moving average at $42.16, a level
silver last traded at while climbing through it in late 2025.
In more
than 15 years charting metals at FinanceMagnates.com, documented across my analyst page, I have watched a broken multi-year moving
average rarely get reclaimed on the first attempt.
My daily
chart is where the near-term battle sits. Price is defended by the ascending
trendline drawn from the April 2025 lows and by horizontal support at $54.57, a
shelf built from the October and November 2025 highs.
XAG/USD breaks $64 50-week EMA, 200 WMA at $42 next. Source: Tradingview.com
Above
price, the 50-day EMA at $69.79 is falling toward the 200-day EMA at $67.06,
and the gap is narrowing toward a death cross, one of the more reliable bearish
signals on the daily timeframe. My directional bias stays lower while silver
trades below the $67 to $70 moving-average band, the same zone I flagged as the
ceiling in my recent $96 upside analysis.
A weekly
close below $54.57 opens the door to $46 and then to the 100% Fibonacci
extension at $28.27, the level that anchors my main bear case and would extend
the decline by roughly 50% from here.
50 and 200 EMA near a death cross, $54.50 support. Source: Tradingview.com
The bullish
invalidation is specific: silver needs to reclaim the $67 to $70 EMA grid on
the daily chart and post a weekly close back above $65 to take the pressure off
buyers. Until then, rallies are corrections inside a broken structure, the same
read I held in March when $70 support held for the third time and again failed to reverse the
trend.
|
Level |
Type |
Notes |
|
$69.79 |
50-day EMA / Resistance |
Falling |
|
$67.06 |
200-day EMA / Resistance |
Lower |
|
$64.50 |
Broken support / Resistance |
Old |
|
$58.20 |
Spot (July 1, 2026) |
Grinding |
|
$54.57 |
Support |
April |
|
$46.26 |
Support |
Intermediate downside shelf |
|
$42.16 |
200-week MA / Target |
First major weekly objective |
|
$28.27 |
100% Fib extension / Target |
Main bear |
Why Is Silver Falling? Fed
Hike Bets and the Hormuz Oil Shock
Silver is
falling for a reason that has little to do with its own supply and demand. The
safe-haven premium the metal carried through the Strait of Hormuz crisis has
unwound, and the same oil-driven inflation that should support silver is
instead feeding expectations of Federal Reserve rate hikes.
Markets now
price at least one hike this year, with the first potentially in September, and
a non-yielding asset loses its appeal when real yields and the dollar rise
together. Silver has amplified the move because it typically swings around
three times gold’s percentage change in both directions.
Rania Gule,
Senior Market Analyst at XS.com, calls the selloff “a deeper repricing of
market expectations” on the path of US rates. Gule points to fading bets
on near-term rate cuts and a Fed tone that has shifted from easing to caution
as the primary driver.
Strategists
at Macquarie said “price action is back to being macro driven” after
this year’s profit-taking. The bank expects silver to hold range-bound for the
rest of 2026 before trending lower in 2027, with inflation and Fed-hike risk
capping any rebound.
The
drivers behind the current leg down stack up like this:
- Hawkish Fed repricing: markets price at least one
2026 rate hike, lifting the opportunity cost of holding silver - Stronger dollar and higher real
yields: both
mechanical headwinds for dollar-denominated, non-yielding metals - Unwinding risk premium: the Hormuz safe-haven bid has
faded as US-Iran talks advance - Industrial demand softening: solar silver demand is running
about 19% lower year-on-year even as the market stays in deficit - Quarter-end repositioning: leveraged longs built during
the record run are still being flushed out
Silver Price Predictions
for 2026: How Far Can the Drop Go?
Wall
Street’s silver forecasts have been cut hard through June, and the range now
spans my sub-$30 bear case to bullish year-end targets near $90. LiteFinance
sees silver sliding to $50.50 and then $40 if strong jobs data and a hawkish
Fed chair confirm the tightening path, and that $40 projection sits almost
exactly on my 200-week average at $42, making it the external call my chart
most supports.
BMO Capital
Markets downgraded its third-quarter view to around $69, while ING’s Ewa
Manthey cut her numbers to $68 in the third quarter and $74 in the fourth, and
both targets land inside the $67 to $70 resistance band I say now caps the
metal. J.P. Morgan’s Greg Shearer still models an $81 average for 2026, a call
made before the weekly breakdown that now sits close to 40% above spot and is
hard to square with a broken 50-week EMA.
Commerzbank’s
$90 year-end target is the cleanest bull case, but my chart only turns
constructive on a weekly close back above $65, so that scenario needs the whole
rate-hike narrative to reverse. For the fuller institutional bull case, I laid
out the BofA, Citi, and Reuters $300 targets when COMEX inventory was
tightening, and the broader metals repricing runs alongside the Goldman Sachs gold outlook I covered this quarter.
|
Source |
Target |
Notes |
|
Damian Chmiel (my call) |
Below $30 |
100% Fib |
|
LiteFinance |
$40 / $50.50 |
June 30, |
|
BMO Capital Markets |
~$69 (Q3 avg) |
June 2026 downgrade |
|
ING (Ewa Manthey) |
$68 Q3 / $74 Q4 |
June cut |
|
J.P. |
$81 (2026 avg) |
Set |
|
Commerzbank |
$90 (year-end) |
Bull |
Silver Price Prediction
FAQ
Why is silver going down
right now?
Silver is
down because the safe-haven premium from the Strait of Hormuz crisis has
unwound while the same oil-driven inflation feeds Federal Reserve rate-hike
expectations. Markets now price at least one 2026 hike, which raises the
opportunity cost of holding a non-yielding metal. A firmer dollar and higher
real yields add mechanical pressure, and silver amplifies the move at roughly
three times gold’s volatility .
How low can silver go in
2026?
My weekly
chart targets the 200-week moving average at $42 first, then the 100% Fibonacci
extension at $28.27 as the main bear objective, a further 50% from current
levels near $58. Those targets activate on a weekly close below the $54.57
support shelf. External forecasts are less aggressive, with LiteFinance’s $40
the closest to my primary downside path.
What is the key support
level for silver?
The pivotal
support is $54.57, where the ascending trendline from the April 2025 lows meets
horizontal support built from the October and November 2025 highs. Silver is
defending that shelf now. A weekly close below it removes the last structural
floor before $46 and then the $28 Fibonacci extension. Above price, the broken
$64.50 level is now the first resistance.
Could silver rebound from
here?
Yes, but
the bar is specific. Silver needs to reclaim the daily 50 and 200 EMA band
between $67 and $70 and close a week back above $65 to shift the bias. A dovish
Fed pivot or weak US jobs data could trigger it by reviving rate-cut bets.
Until that happens, my read is that rallies are corrections inside a broken
structure.
What do analysts forecast
for silver prices?
Forecasts
have been cut through June and span a wide range. J.P. Morgan models an $81
average for 2026 and Commerzbank targets $90 by year-end on the bull side,
while ING sees $68 to $74 and BMO around $69. LiteFinance flags $40 in a
hawkish scenario. My own bear case, below $30, sits at the low end of the
range.
Silver
traded near $58.20 per ounce on Wednesday, July 1, 2026, grinding sideways in
the high-$50s after last week’s break below the $64.50 floor that had capped
the post-record consolidation since December. The white metal (XAG/USD) is down more than 50% from its $121.67
all-time high set on January 29 and has lost roughly 22% in the past month
alone.
The weekly
breakdown is the most consequential technical event of the year for silver, and
both of my charts point lower from here.
Below, I
map both timeframes, the levels that matter, and the point where my bear case
breaks.
Follow
me on X for real-time silver market analysis: @ChmielDk
My weekly
chart shows silver closing below $64.50 for the first time since December,
breaking the support that marked the floor of the entire post-record
consolidation. That level lined up with the 50-week EMA at $64.18, so the
moving average gave way with it, and price is still falling on the breakout.
Broken support now acts as resistance.
The next
objective on this timeframe is the 200-week moving average at $42.16, a level
silver last traded at while climbing through it in late 2025.
In more
than 15 years charting metals at FinanceMagnates.com, documented across my analyst page, I have watched a broken multi-year moving
average rarely get reclaimed on the first attempt.
My daily
chart is where the near-term battle sits. Price is defended by the ascending
trendline drawn from the April 2025 lows and by horizontal support at $54.57, a
shelf built from the October and November 2025 highs.
XAG/USD breaks $64 50-week EMA, 200 WMA at $42 next. Source: Tradingview.com
Above
price, the 50-day EMA at $69.79 is falling toward the 200-day EMA at $67.06,
and the gap is narrowing toward a death cross, one of the more reliable bearish
signals on the daily timeframe. My directional bias stays lower while silver
trades below the $67 to $70 moving-average band, the same zone I flagged as the
ceiling in my recent $96 upside analysis.
A weekly
close below $54.57 opens the door to $46 and then to the 100% Fibonacci
extension at $28.27, the level that anchors my main bear case and would extend
the decline by roughly 50% from here.
50 and 200 EMA near a death cross, $54.50 support. Source: Tradingview.com
The bullish
invalidation is specific: silver needs to reclaim the $67 to $70 EMA grid on
the daily chart and post a weekly close back above $65 to take the pressure off
buyers. Until then, rallies are corrections inside a broken structure, the same
read I held in March when $70 support held for the third time and again failed to reverse the
trend.
|
Level |
Type |
Notes |
|
$69.79 |
50-day EMA / Resistance |
Falling |
|
$67.06 |
200-day EMA / Resistance |
Lower |
|
$64.50 |
Broken support / Resistance |
Old |
|
$58.20 |
Spot (July 1, 2026) |
Grinding |
|
$54.57 |
Support |
April |
|
$46.26 |
Support |
Intermediate downside shelf |
|
$42.16 |
200-week MA / Target |
First major weekly objective |
|
$28.27 |
100% Fib extension / Target |
Main bear |
Why Is Silver Falling? Fed
Hike Bets and the Hormuz Oil Shock
Silver is
falling for a reason that has little to do with its own supply and demand. The
safe-haven premium the metal carried through the Strait of Hormuz crisis has
unwound, and the same oil-driven inflation that should support silver is
instead feeding expectations of Federal Reserve rate hikes.
Markets now
price at least one hike this year, with the first potentially in September, and
a non-yielding asset loses its appeal when real yields and the dollar rise
together. Silver has amplified the move because it typically swings around
three times gold’s percentage change in both directions.
Rania Gule,
Senior Market Analyst at XS.com, calls the selloff “a deeper repricing of
market expectations” on the path of US rates. Gule points to fading bets
on near-term rate cuts and a Fed tone that has shifted from easing to caution
as the primary driver.
Strategists
at Macquarie said “price action is back to being macro driven” after
this year’s profit-taking. The bank expects silver to hold range-bound for the
rest of 2026 before trending lower in 2027, with inflation and Fed-hike risk
capping any rebound.
The
drivers behind the current leg down stack up like this:
- Hawkish Fed repricing: markets price at least one
2026 rate hike, lifting the opportunity cost of holding silver - Stronger dollar and higher real
yields: both
mechanical headwinds for dollar-denominated, non-yielding metals - Unwinding risk premium: the Hormuz safe-haven bid has
faded as US-Iran talks advance - Industrial demand softening: solar silver demand is running
about 19% lower year-on-year even as the market stays in deficit - Quarter-end repositioning: leveraged longs built during
the record run are still being flushed out
Silver Price Predictions
for 2026: How Far Can the Drop Go?
Wall
Street’s silver forecasts have been cut hard through June, and the range now
spans my sub-$30 bear case to bullish year-end targets near $90. LiteFinance
sees silver sliding to $50.50 and then $40 if strong jobs data and a hawkish
Fed chair confirm the tightening path, and that $40 projection sits almost
exactly on my 200-week average at $42, making it the external call my chart
most supports.
BMO Capital
Markets downgraded its third-quarter view to around $69, while ING’s Ewa
Manthey cut her numbers to $68 in the third quarter and $74 in the fourth, and
both targets land inside the $67 to $70 resistance band I say now caps the
metal. J.P. Morgan’s Greg Shearer still models an $81 average for 2026, a call
made before the weekly breakdown that now sits close to 40% above spot and is
hard to square with a broken 50-week EMA.
Commerzbank’s
$90 year-end target is the cleanest bull case, but my chart only turns
constructive on a weekly close back above $65, so that scenario needs the whole
rate-hike narrative to reverse. For the fuller institutional bull case, I laid
out the BofA, Citi, and Reuters $300 targets when COMEX inventory was
tightening, and the broader metals repricing runs alongside the Goldman Sachs gold outlook I covered this quarter.
|
Source |
Target |
Notes |
|
Damian Chmiel (my call) |
Below $30 |
100% Fib |
|
LiteFinance |
$40 / $50.50 |
June 30, |
|
BMO Capital Markets |
~$69 (Q3 avg) |
June 2026 downgrade |
|
ING (Ewa Manthey) |
$68 Q3 / $74 Q4 |
June cut |
|
J.P. |
$81 (2026 avg) |
Set |
|
Commerzbank |
$90 (year-end) |
Bull |
Silver Price Prediction
FAQ
Why is silver going down
right now?
Silver is
down because the safe-haven premium from the Strait of Hormuz crisis has
unwound while the same oil-driven inflation feeds Federal Reserve rate-hike
expectations. Markets now price at least one 2026 hike, which raises the
opportunity cost of holding a non-yielding metal. A firmer dollar and higher
real yields add mechanical pressure, and silver amplifies the move at roughly
three times gold’s volatility .
How low can silver go in
2026?
My weekly
chart targets the 200-week moving average at $42 first, then the 100% Fibonacci
extension at $28.27 as the main bear objective, a further 50% from current
levels near $58. Those targets activate on a weekly close below the $54.57
support shelf. External forecasts are less aggressive, with LiteFinance’s $40
the closest to my primary downside path.
What is the key support
level for silver?
The pivotal
support is $54.57, where the ascending trendline from the April 2025 lows meets
horizontal support built from the October and November 2025 highs. Silver is
defending that shelf now. A weekly close below it removes the last structural
floor before $46 and then the $28 Fibonacci extension. Above price, the broken
$64.50 level is now the first resistance.
Could silver rebound from
here?
Yes, but
the bar is specific. Silver needs to reclaim the daily 50 and 200 EMA band
between $67 and $70 and close a week back above $65 to shift the bias. A dovish
Fed pivot or weak US jobs data could trigger it by reviving rate-cut bets.
Until that happens, my read is that rallies are corrections inside a broken
structure.
What do analysts forecast
for silver prices?
Forecasts
have been cut through June and span a wide range. J.P. Morgan models an $81
average for 2026 and Commerzbank targets $90 by year-end on the bull side,
while ING sees $68 to $74 and BMO around $69. LiteFinance flags $40 in a
hawkish scenario. My own bear case, below $30, sits at the low end of the
range.
