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XAG/USD Holds Near $57 After Record Highs – Outlook, Forecasts and Key Levels

Silver prices remain elevated on Tuesday, 2 December 2025, consolidating just below fresh record highs set at the start of the week as traders weigh almost-certain Federal Reserve rate cuts, a weaker US dollar and deep structural supply tightness.


Global Silver Price Today (XAG/USD) – 2 December 2025

Spot silver is still trading in rarefied air.

  • Spot price: Most major feeds show XAG/USD around $57.2–$57.4 per ounce on Tuesday, modestly lower on the session but only a step down from Monday’s all‑time highs. Data from USAGOLD and Barchart both place spot silver near $57.2–$57.3 in early US trading. [1]
  • Intraday range: Intraday data from Twelve Data show Monday’s breakout extending into an early spike above $58, with today’s trade oscillating roughly between the high-$56s and low-$58s before settling back near $57.2. [2]
  • Versus Monday: TradingEconomics and other macro dashboards note silver easing to roughly $57.29 today, down about 1–1.5% from Monday’s close but still up around 19% over the past month and roughly 85% year‑on‑year. [3]
  • 52‑week / all‑time high: Barchart’s forex overview shows a 52‑week – and effectively all‑time – high around $58.8 per ounce, reached on 1 December 2025. [4]

Put simply: today’s pullback is a dip, not a collapse. Silver remains within a couple of dollars of fresh records after one of the steepest rallies in its modern history.


Silver Rate in India Today – Prices Near ₹2 Lakh per Kg

Indian buyers are feeling the global surge amplified by a softer rupee.

Physical silver prices

  • Retail rates: The Indian Express and other local trackers peg silver at about ₹188 per gram – roughly ₹1,88,000 per kg – in key cities like Delhi, Mumbai and Kolkata on 2 December 2025, with some southern cities such as Chennai and Hyderabad closer to ₹1,96,000 per kg. [5]
  • Regional variations: Malayalam outlet Mathrubhumi reports similar levels, with standard 999 silver quoted around ₹1.8–1.9 lakh per kg across major centres, reflecting only a mild day‑on‑day cooling from Monday’s spike. [6]
  • Short‑term trend: Brokerage 5Paisa notes that ₹188 per gram keeps domestic silver near the top of its recent trading band, underlining how aggressively prices have repriced over the past few weeks. [7]

Futures and performance

  • MCX silver: On the futures side, Livemint reports MCX silver opening around ₹1,80,701 per kg, down roughly 0.7% after Monday’s surge, mirroring the small pullback in international markets. [8]
  • YTD move: The same analysis highlights that silver has more than doubled in 2025 in rupee terms, while gold is “only” up about 65% – an outperformance driven by both the global rally and a record‑weak rupee. [9]

For Indian households, that means jewellery, coins and bars are all dramatically more expensive than a year ago, and any “buy on dips” mindset is happening at price levels that would have looked outlandish as recently as 2023.


Why Is Silver So High? The Three Big Drivers

1. Fed pivot and a weaker dollar

The macro backdrop has flipped firmly in silver’s favour.

  • FXEmpire notes that Fed rate‑cut odds for December have jumped to about 87%, up from around 70% just days earlier, after a run of softer US data and more dovish central‑bank commentary. [10]
  • The Times of India and other outlets put the probability of a December cut near 88%, with markets also expecting further easing into 2026. [11]
  • Barchart’s dollar commentary shows the US dollar index sliding to multi‑week lows as rate expectations shift, historically a strong tailwind for dollar‑priced metals like silver. [12]

Lower real yields and a softening dollar reduce the opportunity cost of holding non‑yielding assets, making silver more attractive both as a hedge and as a speculative play.

2. Deep structural supply deficits and industrial demand

Silver’s story is no longer just about safe‑haven flows.

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Analysis from EBC Financial Group, drawing on Silver Institute and LSEG data, highlights that: [13]

  • Industrial demand hit a record ~680 million ounces in 2024, the fourth consecutive record year, driven by electronics, 5G, EVs and especially solar.
  • The market has registered four straight years of deficits, with a structural shortfall of around 150 million ounces in 2024 and a cumulative deficit of nearly 680 million ounces between 2021 and 2024.
  • Solar alone accounted for roughly 240 million ounces in 2024, and could add another ~150 million ounces of yearly demand by 2030, according to LSEG‑based projections.

At the same time, mine supply is constrained because most silver is produced as a by‑product of other metals. EBC cites projections that global output could edge down from roughly 944 million ounces in 2025 to around 900 million by 2030 as some mines close or grade quality declines. [14]

That combination – record demand and slow supply growth – underpins the sense that this rally is more than pure speculation.

3. Inventory tightness, “critical mineral” status and market plumbing

The physical market looks increasingly tight:

  • EBC notes that inventories in Shanghai Futures Exchange warehouses have dropped to their lowest since 2015, while visible stock on the Shanghai Gold Exchange is also thin – a sign that on‑exchange metal is being drawn down. [15]
  • London experienced a sharp supply squeeze in October, reportedly forcing tens of millions of ounces to be flown in from other hubs. [16]
  • Around 75 million ounces have left COMEX vaults since early October, as traders reposition metal globally amid worries over potential premiums or policy changes, according to the same analysis. [17]
  • The metal was added to the US Geological Survey’s “critical minerals” list in November 2025, raising the possibility of future trade, tariff or stockpiling distortions that could tighten supply further. [18]

On top of that, a high‑profile CME/COMEX outage on 28 November disrupted futures trading across asset classes; when markets reopened, silver “ripped through” prior highs, helping propel prices into the mid‑$50s. [19]

All of this has fed a narrative of “not enough metal in the right place at the right time”, which tends to magnify price moves once speculative money piles in.


What Analysts Are Saying Today (2 December 2025)

Several fresh takes hit the wires over the past 24 hours. Here’s how forecasters are framing the move.

Short‑term trading views

  • DailyForex (today): A morning wrap describes silver as having “led precious metals higher” and hit a new record high near $58 on Monday, but warns that the breakout comes on high volatility and suggests position sizes should be smaller than usual. Day traders are encouraged to treat intraday pullbacks and rebounds with extra caution. [20]
  • FXEmpire (yesterday, setting up this week): Silver is seen consolidating just below $57.85 after an “extended bullish run”. The first major support band lies around $55.99–$56.00, with the bias toward a retest of about $59.09 if that zone holds. [21]

Aggressive upside calls

  • Economic Times / Peter McGuire (today): In an interview with ET Now, Peter McGuire, CEO of Australia‑Trading.com, calls December a “tear‑away month” for metals and plants “a flag in the sand” for silver at $60 per ounce this month. He points to silver being up around 90% year‑to‑date, tight supply and a Fed rate‑cut probability that has jumped from about 20% to nearly 90% in just ten days. [22]

More measured, but still bullish, scenarios

  • Times of India / Mirae Asset (today): Analyst Praveen Singh highlights that spot silver recently traded near $58.28, up over 3% on the day, after a week‑long rally of nearly 13%. He flags plunging Chinese inventories and notes the gold–silver ratio dropping below a long‑term support around 73.25, suggesting more room for silver outperformance. Singh’s base case: silver could extend toward $62–$65 in the coming weeks or months, with buy‑the‑dip strategies preferred and $54 cited as a key stop‑loss level. [23]
  • FXStreet (yesterday): A technical note from FXStreet says silver has rallied about 15% in six trading days, marking fresh record highs around $57.9, powered by Fed‑cut hopes and mild risk aversion. It flags overbought Relative Strength Index (RSI) readings and sets immediate resistance at $58 and then the psychological $60, with support near $56.45 and then prior highs around $54.45. [24]
  • EBC mid‑term map (Dec 1): EBC’s deep‑dive emphasizes the mid‑$50s as the new “battlefield” zone. Its technical map highlights:
    • $57.5–58.0 – immediate resistance / new high band
    • $56–56.5 – breakout area and first reference support
    • $55–54 – first “strong” support zone
    • $50–50.7 – major breakout base and key line in the sand for longer‑term bulls [25]

In other words, most professional commentary remains constructive, but almost all of it comes with the same caveat: the market is stretched, and corrections of several dollars can happen quickly.


Technical Picture: Key Levels to Watch

Even if you’re not a chart‑junkie, it helps to know where the big lines are drawn.

Overbought, but still a strong uptrend

  • Barchart’s technical “Opinion” on XAG/USD currently shows a 100% “Strong Buy” rating, with RSI above 70, signalling a strong but overbought trend where a reversal can come suddenly. [26]
  • EBC and FXStreet both stress that daily and 4‑hour RSIs have pushed deep into the overbought zone, raising the odds of “air pockets” – sharp, fast drawdowns within a still‑bullish larger trend. [27]

Key resistance zones

Pulling together Barchart, FXStreet, FXEmpire and EBC, the market is broadly focused on:

  • $58–59: Immediate resistance / recent record‑high band (spot highs between ~$57.9 and $58.8). [28]
  • $60: Major psychological barrier and next upside target in multiple forecasts. [29]
  • Low‑$60s (~$62–$65): Extension zone flagged by both EBC and Times of India as plausible if the uptrend persists and risk appetite stays firm. [30]

Support zones

On the downside, traders are watching:

  • $56–56.5: First important intraday support band and breakout area, highlighted by FXEmpire and EBC. [31]
  • $55–54: “Normal pullback” zone after the recent spike; EBC and TOI both see this area as a healthy reset rather than a trend break. [32]
  • Around $50: The big structural line. EBC’s analysis treats the $50–50.7 region as the major base of this entire breakout; as long as price holds above it, the long‑term bull case remains intact. [33]

For silver futures on COMEX, Barchart quotes December 2025 contracts (SIZ25) around $57.15, with computed pivot levels showing: [34]

  • First resistance near $59.2, then $60.0–61.6
  • First support around $56.9, then $55.3–54.5

These numbers line up neatly with the spot‑market levels analysts are discussing.


Is This a Bubble or a New Regime? The Risk Checklist

Even bulls are clear that the current phase is high‑risk, high‑volatility. Key downside triggers to watch:

  1. Stronger‑than‑expected US data
    • FXEmpire notes that an upside surprise in key releases such as ISM manufacturing could lift the dollar and pressure metals, at least in the short term. [35]
  2. A less‑dovish Fed than markets expect
    • If the Fed cuts less than priced or signals a slower easing path, real yields could back up again, undercutting part of silver’s macro support.
  3. Macro slowdown hitting industrial demand
    • While supply is tight, silver is also a cyclical industrial metal. Persistent weakness in China and global manufacturing PMIs – highlighted in recent gold/silver outlooks – could cool demand for electronics and solar, blunting the bull case. [36]
  4. Positioning and sentiment
    • CFTC data (summarised by Barchart) show sizeable speculative long positions in silver futures; in such conditions, any negative surprise can produce a “rush for the exit” and outsized short‑term drops. [37]

In short: the fundamental backdrop is strong, but the tape is extended. That combination can deliver both spectacular gains and brutal shake‑outs.


What Today’s Move Means for Different Types of Investors

None of this is personalised advice, but analysts are broadly offering the following playbooks.

1. Short‑term traders

  • Treat silver as a momentum market in overdrive.
  • Several desks advocate reduced position sizes, wider stops and a willingness to step aside entirely if volatility spikes. [38]
  • For intraday strategies, the $56–56.5 support and $58–60 resistance bands are likely to be the key battleground zones over the coming sessions.

2. Medium‑term swing traders

  • Times of India and EBC both lean toward a “buy‑on‑dips” bias as long as pullbacks hold above the mid‑$50s and certainly above the $50–51 base. [39]
  • Common themes:
    • Consider scaling in rather than all‑in at once.
    • Use $54–55 as a rough line where the current leg of the rally would start to look tired.
    • Watch Fed communication and key macro data like ISM, jobs numbers and inflation prints very closely.

3. Long‑term investors and “stackers”

  • EBC and USAGOLD both frame the breakout as part of a longer shift toward structurally tighter precious‑metals markets, supported by central‑bank buying (for gold), chronic deficits (for silver) and industrial electrification. [40]
  • At the same time, Livemint relays broker guidance that precious metals should generally remain around 10% or less of a diversified portfolio, and stresses that silver’s volatility makes it suitable only for investors with high risk tolerance and long horizons. [41]
  • For these investors, the focus tends to be on position sizing and time horizon, not trying to catch exact tops or bottoms.

4. Indian household investors

  • Domestic silver has raced toward ₹1.8–2 lakh per kg, and the rupee’s weakness means local prices can stay sticky even if dollar prices pull back. [42]
  • Analysts repeatedly recommend staggered buying (SIP‑style) rather than lump‑sum bets, and emphasise that gold remains the more stable “core” holding, with silver as a high‑beta satellite exposure. [43]

Bottom Line

  • Today, 2 December 2025, silver is consolidating just above $57 per ounce, only a short step down from fresh record highs near $58 hit at the start of the week. [44]
  • The rally rests on a powerful mix of Fed‑cut expectations, a weaker dollar, multi‑year supply deficits, record industrial demand and visible inventory tightness. [45]
  • Forecasts for the next few weeks cluster around a volatile range between the mid‑$50s and low‑$60s, with upside targets at $60–65 and key support around $55–54 and then the $50 breakout base. [46]
  • Almost every major analyst, though, adds the same warning: this is a market to respect, not to chase blindly.

If you’re following silver today, the message is clear: the bull market is intact, but the easy part of the move may already be behind us.

References

1. www.usagold.com, 2. twelvedata.com, 3. tradingeconomics.com, 4. www.barchart.com, 5. indianexpress.com, 6. english.mathrubhumi.com, 7. www.5paisa.com, 8. www.livemint.com, 9. www.livemint.com, 10. www.fxempire.com, 11. timesofindia.indiatimes.com, 12. www.barchart.com, 13. www.ebc.com, 14. www.ebc.com, 15. www.ebc.com, 16. www.ebc.com, 17. www.ebc.com, 18. www.ebc.com, 19. www.ebc.com, 20. www.dailyforex.com, 21. www.fxempire.com, 22. m.economictimes.com, 23. timesofindia.indiatimes.com, 24. www.fxstreet.com, 25. www.ebc.com, 26. www.barchart.com, 27. www.ebc.com, 28. www.barchart.com, 29. www.fxstreet.com, 30. www.ebc.com, 31. www.fxempire.com, 32. www.ebc.com, 33. www.ebc.com, 34. www.barchart.com, 35. www.fxempire.com, 36. timesofindia.indiatimes.com, 37. www.barchart.com, 38. www.dailyforex.com, 39. www.ebc.com, 40. www.ebc.com, 41. www.livemint.com, 42. indianexpress.com, 43. www.livemint.com, 44. twelvedata.com, 45. www.ebc.com, 46. www.fxstreet.com


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