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    1. Home
    2. >Finance
    3. >Silver faces sixth year of deficit with stock drawdown raising squeeze risks, research shows
    Finance

    Silver Faces Sixth Year of Deficit With Stock Drawdown Raising Squeeze Risks, Research Shows

    Published by Global Banking & Finance Review®

    Posted on April 15, 2026

    3 min read

    Last updated: April 15, 2026

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    Tags:FinanceMarketsCommoditiesSilverInvesting

    Quick Summary

    Silver is set for a sixth consecutive annual supply deficit in 2026, with stock drawdowns totaling over 762 million oz since 2021 and pressures simmering amid volatile prices and thin inventories in key hubs. Liquidity risks persist despite some easing.

    Silver Market Faces Sixth Consecutive Year of Deficit as Stockpiles Fall

    Analysis of Silver Market Trends and Outlook

    Ongoing Deficit and Market Dynamics

    LONDON, April 15 (Reuters) - The silver market is heading for a sixth year of structural deficit, with 762 million troy ounces drawn from stocks since 2021, raising the risk of a renewed liquidity squeeze despite weaker demand expectations, the Silver Institute and consultancy Metals Focus said on Wednesday.

    Silver, used in jewellery, electronics, electric vehicles and solar panels as well as for investment, is down 35% since a bout of frenzied retail buying - following a 147% surge in 2025 - drove prices to a record high of $121.6 an ounce in January.

    Drivers Behind Recent Price Movements

    The base for that rally was created in 2025 by months of inflows of the metal to the U.S. inventories and silver-backed exchange-traded products (ETPs) alongside a spike in physical demand that triggered a liquidity squeeze in the benchmark London market in October.

    Since then, liquidity has improved as metal flowed back from the U.S., ETPs saw outflows and Indian demand eased.

    Liquidity Risks and Market Vulnerabilities

    "Lease rates in London have largely normalised, but risks of another liquidity squeeze this year remain," said Philip Newman, managing director at Metals Focus, which prepared the research for the Silver Institute industry association.

    Metals Focus estimates that 28% of 884 million ounces of silver held in London vaults at end-March were not tied to ETPs and were potentially available to support liquidity, the highest share since January 2025 and up from a historic low of 17% in September that helped precipitate the October squeeze.

    Conditions for a silver squeeze will be created again, requiring further outflows from the U.S., if the price becomes more volatile and Indian demand gets active, especially coupled with inflows to ETPs storing their metal in London, Newman said.

    Forecasts for Supply, Demand, and Market Balance

    The global silver market deficit is expected to widen to 46.3 million ounces in 2026 from 40.3 million in 2025, even as total demand falls 2% due to weaker industrial and jewellery consumption, partly offset by stronger coin and bar demand, the research showed.

    Industrial silver fabrication is forecast to fall 3% to a four-year low with the Iran war's damage to global growth threatening further downside. By contrast, coin and bar demand is seen rising 18% supported by a recovery in the U.S. buying.

    Total global silver supply is forecast to decline 2%, reflecting producer hedging normalising after jumping in the second half of 2025.

    Silver Supply & Demand Data

    SILVER SUPPLY & DEMAND* (million troy ounces)

    2024 2025 2026F

    SUPPLY

    Mine production 823.6 846.6 844.1

    Recycling 194.5 197.6 211.3

    Net hedging supply - 44.7 10.0

    Net official sector sales 1.5 1.5 1.0

    TOTAL SUPPLY 1,019.6 1,090.4 1,066.4

    DEMAND

    Total industrial: 679.0 657.4 639.6

    - electrical/electronics 460.9 449.5 422.9

    … of which photovoltaics 197.5 186.6 151.0

    - brazing alloys/solders 49.7 50.5 51.0

    - other industrial 168.4 157.4 165.7

    Photography 25.5 24.2 22.5

    Jewellery 205.1 189.3 159.4

    Silverware 53.5 42.1 33.5

    Coins/net bar demand 190.9 217.7 257.6

    Net hedging demand 3.5 - -

    TOTAL DEMAND 1,157.4 1,130.6 1,112.6

    Market balance -137.9 -40.3 -46.3

    Net investment in ETPs 67.5 278.1 30.0

    Market Balance less ETPs -205.4 -318.4 -76.3

    *Source: Metals Focus for the Silver Institute

    (Reporting by Polina Devitt; Editing by Joe Bavier)

    Table of Contents

    • Analysis of Silver Market Trends and Outlook
    • Ongoing Deficit and Market Dynamics
    • Drivers Behind Recent Price Movements

    Key Takeaways

    • •Silver market remains structurally tight—deficit expected again in 2026 despite modest supply growth and cooling demand segments.
    • •Historic retail-driven rally and extreme price swings from $121 highs in Jan to mid‑$80s highlight market’s volatility and squeeze potential.
    • •Inventory metrics show increased London vault liquidity (28 % free vs 17 % in Sept) reducing—but not eliminating—squeeze risks, especially if inflows to ETPs or Indian demand pick up.

    Frequently Asked Questions about Silver faces sixth year of deficit with stock drawdown raising squeeze risks, research shows

    1Why is the silver market facing a structural deficit?

    The silver market faces a deficit due to continuous outflows from stocks since 2021 and demand that continues to outpace supply, according to research from the Silver Institute and Metals Focus.

    2What factors could trigger another silver liquidity squeeze?

    A liquidity squeeze could occur if silver prices become more volatile, Indian demand rebounds, and inflows to exchange-traded products storing silver in London increase.

    Liquidity Risks and Market Vulnerabilities
  • Forecasts for Supply, Demand, and Market Balance
  • Silver Supply & Demand Data
  • 3How much has silver stock been drawn down since 2021?

    A total of 762 million troy ounces of silver have been drawn from stocks since 2021.

    4How is industrial demand for silver expected to change?

    Industrial silver fabrication demand is forecast to fall 3% to a four-year low in 2026, partly due to the impact of the Iran war on global growth.

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