Silver just had the kind of day that gets its own chapter in market history textbooks.
On January 30, silver futures cratered 31.4% to settle at $78.53 — the worst single-session loss since the Hunt Brothers’ infamous corner collapsed in March 1980. Spot silver fared only marginally better, dropping 28% to $83.45. In a matter of hours, a metal that had been trading near $122 per ounce days earlier got cut nearly in half.
And yet, by Monday morning, two of the analysts who predicted the crash were already flipping bullish. Here’s why the panic may have created the best entry point silver has offered in months.
What Actually Happened
The crash didn’t come out of nowhere — it came out of everywhere at once.
The immediate trigger was President Trump’s nomination of Kevin Warsh as the next Federal Reserve Chair on Friday morning. Markets read the appointment as hawkish: Warsh, a former Fed governor, is viewed as favoring tighter monetary discipline, which strengthened the dollar and crushed the entire precious metals complex. suffered its worst day since 1983, dropping 11.4% to $4,745.
But Warsh was the match, not the dynamite. The real explosive was leverage.
The CME Group had already been tightening the screws, hiking maintenance margins on silver futures from 11% to 15% — with heightened-risk positions requiring 16.5% — in a shift to percentage-based margin requirements. A second margin hike was announced on January 30 itself, with increases of 36% for silver and 33% for gold, effective Monday, February 2. The exchange was telling over-leveraged speculators: post more collateral or get out.
Most of them got out. Forced liquidation cascaded through COMEX as traders who had been riding 5,000-ounce contracts with minimal collateral suddenly couldn’t meet margin calls. Stop-losses triggered more stop-losses. The algorithmic dominoes fell fast.
The mechanics are virtually identical to how the Hunt Brothers’ silver position was busted in 1980 — regulators raised margin requirements until the overleveraged couldn’t hold on. History doesn’t repeat, but the margin playbook sure does.

The Disconnect That Matters Most
Here’s where it gets interesting for anyone looking beyond the wreckage.
While paper silver was getting destroyed on COMEX, physical premiums in Shanghai and Dubai actually surged — as much as $20 per ounce above Western spot prices, according to TheStreet. That divergence tells you something critical: the selling wasn’t driven by a collapse in real demand. It was a leverage event, pure and simple.
The structural supply deficit that powered silver’s 250% rally over the past year hasn’t evaporated because margin clerks sent out a few billion in calls. The Silver Institute has projected a fifth consecutive year of structural shortfall. , the world’s largest primary silver miner, just cut its 2026 production guidance to 42-46.5 million ounces, down from 45-51 million, citing operational challenges and lower-grade veins. Hecla Mining’s 2026 guidance of 15.1-16.5 million ounces sits below 2025 output.
On the demand side, industrial consumption from solar panels, EVs, and electronics shows no sign of slowing. The same physical scarcity that pushed silver from $30 to $122 in thirteen months remains the baseline reality.
The Bearish-to-Bullish Flip
The most telling signal came over the weekend. Peter Brandt, a 50-year commodities trading veteran who correctly predicted this crash by comparing the current spike to 2011’s blow-off top, has tactically flipped bullish. So has Marko Kolanovic, the former JPMorgan strategist who spent 16 years at the bank and was inducted into the Institutional Investor Hall of Fame. Both had warned of a 50% correction before the plunge.
Now they’re expecting a bounce. Their reasoning is straightforward: the forced sellers have been forced out. The margin reset is done. And the buyers who remain are holding physical metal, not leveraged paper.
That shift matters because it changes the market’s microstructure. The speculative froth that pushed silver to $122 is gone. What’s left is the underlying bid from industrial buyers, central banks diversifying out of dollars, and physical metal investors who don’t face margin calls.
Where Silver Stands Now — and Where It Could Go
As of Monday morning, silver remains volatile. Spot silver dipped as low as $71.20 before recovering to the $75-82 range, still down roughly 33% from last week’s all-time high of $121.64. Gold stabilized around $4,700-4,730, paring earlier losses.
The big banks haven’t blinked. UBS raised its gold price target to $6,200 per ounce for the first three quarters of 2026, up 24% from its prior $5,000 call. The bank’s upside scenario: $7,200 if geopolitical tensions escalate. Deutsche Bank and Société Générale both project $6,000 gold by year-end. Goldman Sachs lifted its target to $5,400.
If gold is heading to $6,000+, silver’s current price looks like a gift. The gold-to-silver ratio had compressed to roughly 31 before the crash — levels last seen in 2011 — and even after Friday’s carnage, the ratio only expanded modestly. Historically, silver outperforms gold in sustained precious metals bull markets once the shakeout is complete.
The Tickers to Watch
- — The most liquid pure-play on silver prices. Traded near $91 pre-crash; now represents a discounted entry to physical silver exposure without mining risk.
- — The world’s largest silver mining company by market cap. Miners fell 11% pre-market Friday, but PAAS has a structural advantage: 2026 silver production guidance of 25-27 million ounces (up from 22.8M in 2025) and an all-in sustaining cost near $15/oz. At $80+ silver, that’s enormous margin.
- — Record revenue of $410 million last quarter, cash costs negative $2.03/oz thanks to lead and zinc byproduct credits. Net leverage dropped from 1.8x to 0.3x over the past year. This is a de-risked miner trading at crash prices.
- — A streaming model that avoids operational mining risk entirely. Gets ~39% of revenue from silver. Expects production to grow from 600-670K gold-equivalent ounces in 2025 to 950K GEOs by 2030-2034.
— For traders wanting leveraged exposure to the recovery. Junior miners got hit hardest in the selloff and stand to snap back the most aggressively.
The Risks Are Real
Let’s not pretend this is risk-free. There are genuine reasons to be cautious.
If silver fails to hold the $70-75 zone — roughly the 50-day moving average that was tested Monday — the technical picture deteriorates fast. One strategist at Pace 360 warned that if gold can’t reclaim $4,900, the top may already be in, with a decline toward $3,800 possible by October 2026. Silver would follow.
The dollar’s reaction to the Warsh appointment is another wildcard. A structurally stronger greenback is a headwind for all dollar-denominated commodities. And the CME’s margin hikes aren’t going away — they’ve permanently raised the cost of speculation, which caps the type of parabolic moves that pushed silver to $122.
There’s also the China factor. Bloomberg’s Mike McGlone noted that Chinese speculative buying added significant froth to the rally and intensified the selloff when sentiment reversed. If that capital doesn’t return, recovery could be slower than the bulls expect.
What to Watch This Week
Three things will determine whether this crash is a buying opportunity or the start of something worse.
First, whether silver holds above $70 through the week as the new CME margin requirements take effect Monday evening. Second, Wednesday’s ISM Services data and Friday’s January jobs report — strong data would reinforce the hawkish Warsh narrative and pressure metals further. Third, physical premiums in Asia. If Shanghai premiums stay elevated, the structural bid is intact regardless of what paper markets do.
Silver’s 131% gain over the past twelve months didn’t happen because of leverage. It happened because of a supply deficit, industrial demand, and a global rotation into hard assets. Friday’s crash didn’t change any of those fundamentals. It changed who was holding the metal — from over-leveraged speculators to long-term buyers. For investors with the stomach for volatility, that’s exactly the kind of reset you wait for.