- Silver plunged more than 15% after hitting record highs above $84.
- A CME margin hike triggered forced selling and rapid deleveraging.
- Despite the crash, some investors remain bullish on metals long term.
Silver prices unraveled sharply on Monday, plunging more than 15% after an explosive rally pushed the metal to fresh record highs just a day earlier. The abrupt reversal caught traders off guard, dragging silver down toward the $72 level after briefly dipping close to $70 intraday. What looked like unstoppable momentum over the weekend quickly turned into one of the most violent pullbacks the metals market has seen this year.

A Historic Rally Meets a Hard Reset
Before the selloff, silver had surged past $84 on Sunday, capping a stunning rally that lifted prices more than 145% over the past year. The pace of gains had accelerated rapidly, pulling in speculative capital and leverage at an aggressive rate. That same speed, however, left silver highly exposed once conditions shifted, with very little support underneath once selling began.
CME Margin Hike Triggers Forced Liquidations
The catalyst behind the drop was a move by CME Group to raise margin requirements for silver futures, a change that took effect Monday. CME said the adjustment was part of its regular review process tied to heightened volatility, but the market reaction was immediate. Higher margin requirements often force leveraged traders to unwind positions quickly, and in silver’s case, that led to cascading liquidations and amplified downside pressure.

Precious Metals Slide in Unison
Silver’s collapse spilled across the broader precious metals complex. Gold retreated nearly 5% to around $4,325 after its own strong run, while copper fell close to 5% to $5.57. Platinum saw an even sharper reversal, plunging more than 14% from an early high near $2,572 to roughly $2,120. Palladium was hit hardest, sliding over 16% from around $1,930 to near $1,600 as risk appetite evaporated across the sector.
Volatility Returns, but Long-Term Themes Remain
The sudden drawdown has reignited concerns around volatility after months of relentless upside. Some analysts had warned that silver’s rally was becoming overstretched, especially as speculative positioning surged. Still, longer-term bulls argue the broader setup hasn’t fundamentally changed, pointing to easier monetary conditions, fiscal uncertainty, geopolitical risk, and continued diversification demand as ongoing tailwinds for precious metals.











