Silver Price at a Historical Crossroads: Why a COMEX Crisis Is Inevitable

The white metal market at the beginning of 2026 shows not typical commodity fluctuations but signs of a systemic collapse. In January, the spot price of silver per ounce soared to a historic high of $121, but then experienced one of the most catastrophic crashes in modern commodity market history — the price dropped 31-36% in a single trading day. Such extreme movements amid liquidity collapse indicate one thing: the market is on the verge of a breakdown.

How the silver ounce price reached extreme levels in just a few days

The parabolic rise to $121 was caused by short position closures combined with a tightening of volatility amid vanishing liquidity. This was followed by a wave of liquidations on the futures market. Contracts for February 2026 on CME Group fell 8-9% in one day due to a cascade of forced position liquidations triggered by margin requirements rising to a critical 60%.

Externally, analysts attribute the decline to macro factors — speculative leverage, margin calls, and a strengthening dollar. However, hidden data reveal a completely different story: the physical silver market is in a state of severe shortage that the futures segment can no longer hide. The volatility here is not random noise — it’s a desperate attempt by the market to redistribute rapidly shrinking physical stocks, while the paper structure continues to simulate abundance.

Physical shortage versus paper obligations: the silver ounce imbalance reaches a critical point

Global supply of white metal has been in a state of permanent deficit for five consecutive years. The projected deficit in 2026 is estimated at around 200 million ounces. Meanwhile, industrial demand is accelerating due to expanded use in solar panels, electric vehicle batteries, 5G infrastructure, AI equipment, and medical applications.

On a geopolitical level, China has declared silver a strategic asset and imposed strict export restrictions, cutting off one of the main global supply sources. In response, the US has included silver on the list of critically important minerals and announced the creation of a national strategic reserve. Such measures are only taken in the face of acute shortages — excess supply never prompts government intervention.

Stockpiles on the Shanghai exchange have fallen to their lowest levels since 2016, confirming the depth of the supply crisis.

COMEX reserves at a critical level: the price per ounce surges due to physical metal shortages

The situation on the world’s largest metals futures platform looks especially alarming. Registered inventory — metal ready for immediate delivery — has decreased by about 75% since 2020 and currently hovers around 82 million ounces.

Although total storage approaches 411 million ounces, the vast majority are classified as “eligible,” meaning they require further processing and cannot be delivered immediately. Over just seven days in January 2026, more than 33 million ounces were withdrawn — eliminating 26% of all deliverable stocks in a matter of days.

In February, deliveries reached 2,700 contracts, equivalent to 13.8 million ounces, and the acceleration continues without signs of slowing. Meanwhile, open interest for March 2026 contracts fluctuated between 85,000 and 91,000 contracts, theoretically requiring delivery of between 425 and 455 million ounces of physical metal.

Scale imbalance: leverage ratios revealing systemic instability

Comparison of these indicators exposes the extent of the imbalance:

  • Physical metal available for delivery: 82-113 million ounces
  • Open paper positions: 425-455 million ounces
  • Leverage ratio: even in optimistic calculations, 5:1, in extreme cases exceeding 500:1

Even assuming conservatively that only 20% of positions will require physical delivery (the minimum estimate based on historical data), COMEX simply does not have enough physical metal to fulfill its obligations. The math is ruthless and leaves no room for interpretation.

Current silver price volatility is not a result of speculative overheating, as some investors are led to believe. It is a physical manifestation of the systemic insolvency, where paper obligations exceed physical reserves by five to five hundred times.

Signal of collapse: spot discount and EFP spread widening to $1.10 per ounce

The market has repeatedly faced the phenomenon of “spot discount” (retrograde), where the physical metal price drops below the futures price — an abnormal state indicating extreme physical demand. The spread between futures and physical metal exchange contracts (EFP) has widened to $1.10 per ounce, a red flag of extremely high physical demand that the paper market cannot satisfy.

Such spreads only occur during supply crises, when market participants are willing to pay a significant premium just to obtain real metal. This is not theory — it’s a sign of mounting pressure in the system.

March 2026 as a tipping point: delivery failure becoming a matter of time

Industry senior analysts have already publicly expressed concern: March 2026 could become a turning point when the system fails to meet delivery obligations. The March COMEX contracts are at the highest risk during this period. When a delivery failure occurs, it will not just be a story about silver — it will be a sign of systemic vulnerability of commodity futures, only partially backed, potentially triggering a chain reaction in global financial markets.

Investing in physical silver outside the system becomes the only guaranteed store of value under these conditions. The next move in silver price will be driven not by investor optimism but by the pure necessity to obtain real metal from a depleted pool. The game is not over, but the rules have already been rewritten.

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