Silver, the commodity metal that has awakened from a five‑decade slumber, has breached $58 for the first time and is once again making headlines. Analysts say the rally may have room to continue, as demand is poised to grow while supply remains constrained.
Silver, an often overlooked metal commodity, reached yet another milestone in November, breaking a price record set recently.
Gold’s sibling breached the $58 mark on Sunday night, taking a step closer to reaching $60 in its relentless rise, as Japan’s yields rose to levels close to those registered during the 2008 global financial crisis.
While many have linked these two events, relating silver’s resurgence as a hedge to the crumbling Japanese debt system, the silver breakout has been years in the making, with bulls declaring that the market had been manipulated and suppressed by the powers that be until now.
Analysts claim that several elements are contributing to silver’s bull moment, including dwindling inventories in main warehouses around the world, and the relatively small size of the market, which reaches a tenth of gold’s numbers.

Silver’s supply is unlikely to increase in the short term, a phenomenon explained by silver market analyst Peter Krauth, who declared that mining supply could even reach negative numbers.
Read more: Analyst Forecasts Silver Shortage, Price Increases As Consumers Tap Dwindling Secondary Inventories
Gold bug Peter Schiff established a relationship between silver’s rise and bitcoin’s price drop, explaining that the latter was the former’s “mirror image.”
“During the month of November while silver surged 16.5%, bitcoin tanked 17.5%. But silver is up 95% so far in 2025, while bitcoin is only down 4%,” he stressed on Friday, concluding that “since silver will likely go much higher, that means its mirror image will likely crash.”
As Schiff predicted, at the same time that silver rose, bitcoin fell under $88K, showing a correlation with risk assets, with traders losing close to $200 million in long positions.
Read more: Bitcoin Falls off a Cliff as $91K Support Vaporizes
Silver broke past the $58 mark, moving closer to $60 amidst rising yields in Japan, leading to renewed interest in the metal.
Analysts suggest that silver’s resurgence is partly a hedge against the crumbling Japanese debt system, with fears driving investment.
Dwindling inventories in major warehouses and the relatively small size of the silver market, which is one-tenth that of gold, are fueling the price increase.
Schiff noted that as silver surged by 16.5% in November, bitcoin fell by 17.5%, suggesting a mirrored relationship between the two assets.
Related Articles
Mainstream CEX and DEX funding rates show the market maintains a comprehensive bearish outlook
Bitcoin whale wallets increased by 753 over three months, a 3.9% rise.
Sophisticated traders shift focus to Bitcoin volatility amid directional trading challenges
Yesterday Bitcoin spot ETF had net outflows of 89.65 million dollars, with BlackRock's IBIT outflow of 37.71 million dollars
Bitcoin Price Lags Behind Global Money Supply Growth, High Energy Costs and Interest Rates Exacerbate Pressure