Spot Silver Crashes Below $70 on March 23, 2026 Amid Extreme Volatility and Rate Fears
23.03.2026 - 15:55:25 | ad-hoc-news.deSilver futures opened at $72.83 on March 23, 2026, only to crash to $67.74 before ripping back to $74.62 and settling around $69.66. This $6.88 intraday swing dwarfs the normal $1-2 daily range, signaling extreme volatility just five days before April First Notice Day on COMEX, where registered silver stands at a mere 78.34 million ounces.
As of: March 23, 2026
Dr. Elena Voss, Senior Commodities Analyst. Tracking silver's dual role as industrial metal and inflation hedge amid shifting macro winds.
Today's Violent Price Action Sets Silver Apart
The session marked silver's most turbulent trading day of 2026 so far. Spot silver dipped toward $66.79 per troy ounce, down from Friday's $68.21 close and reflecting a weekly loss of 18% from recent highs. This caps a six-day downtrend, with prices now 44% off the January 29 all-time high of $121.67.
Technical indicators flash oversold signals. The RSI hovers near extreme levels below 30, MACD shows a bearish crossover, and price trades below the Ichimoku cloud. Bollinger Bands have expanded to a $43 spread from $63 to $116, underscoring historic volatility. Silver now tests key support at $67, with a break potentially targeting the 200-day EMA near $50.
COMEX dynamics amplify the pressure. With First Notice Day looming, low registered inventory raises delivery risks for shorts, yet selling persists amid broader risk-off sentiment.
US Rate Rise Crushes Precious Metals Appeal
Higher US interest rates dominate the narrative. Rising yields make bonds more attractive than non-yielding silver for large funds, eroding risk appetite for precious metals. The US dollar's parallel strength further squeezes silver, as a stronger greenback inflates the cost for non-US buyers.
Silver's industrial demand facet offers no relief. Questions swirl around AI data center viability, undercutting optimism that fueled the rally from $29 to over $120. Traders now view silver less as a growth play and more as a risk asset vulnerable to macro tightening.
Confirmed fact: Friday saw silver hammered alongside bonds' rise. Interpretation: This shifts positioning from bullish overcrowding to potential capitulation if $67 breaks.
Silver Underperforms Gold in Ratio Spike
The gold-silver ratio widened to 66-70, with silver lagging gold's relative stability around $4,500 per ounce. Gold fell 3.28% Friday but holds better support at $4,176-$4,500, while silver's beta amplifies downside in corrections.
This divergence matters for allocation. Investors chasing gold's safe-haven narrative find silver overextended, prompting profit-taking. Yet forecasts diverge: CoinCodex sees silver rebounding to $71.23 by March 26 (+5%) and $91.66 year-end (+35%), contrasting bearish gold to $4,025 short-term.
Bullish voices like JPMorgan target $81 average and $85 Q4 for silver, BofA eyes $135-$309 longer-term. But near-term, the ratio's climb signals silver's vulnerability as the riskier precious metal.
European Investors Face Euro-Dollar Squeeze
For DACH and broader European investors, today's drop intensifies pain. The euro's weakness against a surging dollar elevates spot silver costs in EUR terms, eroding returns on physical bullion or ETCs like those listed on Xetra.
ECB policy divergence adds headwinds. While the Fed hikes rates, the ECB's softer stance on inflation fuels currency depreciation, indirectly pressuring silver via FX channels. Swiss investors, traditional precious metals havens, see heightened volatility impacting storage and allocation strategies.
Industrial angle hits home too. Europe's solar sector, reliant on silver paste for photovoltaics, faces input cost uncertainty amid the correction. German manufacturers in autos and electronics track silver closely, as supply chain bets unwind.
ETF Flows and Physical Demand in Focus
Recent ETF outflows accelerated the slide, reflecting de-risking rather than structural shifts. SLV and similar vehicles saw redemptions as yields rose, distinct from safe-haven inflows during prior stress.
Physical demand tells a mixed story. Mine supply lags industrial needs, but current risk-off trumps fundamentals. COMEX tightness could spark a short squeeze if volatility persists, yet rate momentum overshadows.
Sentiment on social platforms turns bearish, with capitulation talk rising. Yet oversold metrics suggest a bounce risk, especially if gold stabilizes.
Near-Term Catalysts and Key Risks
Watch $67 support closely - a break opens $63-$50, per H&S pattern analysis. Upside needs $75 reclaim for bull revival, facing 50-day EMA at $80.
First Notice Day looms as a wildcard, potentially forcing short covering amid low inventory. Macro catalysts include Fed speakers on rates and dollar moves. Geopolitics simmers but yields dominate.
Risks tilt downside: persistent yield climb, dollar strength, AI demand doubts. Upside triggers: ratio normalization, ETF inflow reversal, supply squeeze.
For English-speaking Europeans, this tests conviction in silver's long-term solar/electrification thesis against short-term macro pain. Position sizing matters now.
Disclaimer: Not investment advice. Commodities and other financial instruments are volatile.
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