Silver prices, currently trading near $77 per ounce after a sharp 10% drop this week from two-month highs above $86, reflect trader focus on mixed macro signals and persistent industrial demand. Hotter-than-expected April CPI data reinforced higher-for-longer Federal Reserve expectations, curbing near-term rate-cut prospects and pressuring precious metals while the U.S. dollar firmed. Offsetting this, structural deficits—projected at 46 million ounces for 2026—stem from robust solar, electric vehicle, and AI-driven fabrication demand amid constrained mine supply. The gold-silver ratio near 62:1 highlights silver’s leveraged sensitivity to real yields and risk sentiment. Key near-term catalysts include the June 11 CPI release and the June 16–17 FOMC meeting, where any dovish policy tilt could support a rebound toward June settlement levels.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data. This is not trading advice and plays no role in how this market resolves. · UpdatedWill Silver (SI) hit__ by end of June?
$4,144,881 Vol.
↑ $250
1%
↑ $230
1%
↑ $210
1%
↑ $200
2%
↑ $170
2%
↑ $150
3%
↑ $130
4%
↑ $120
7%
↑ $110
11%
↑ $100
30%
↑ $95
42%
↑ $90
51%
↑ $85
78%
↓ $75
87%
↓ $70
87%
↓ $65
31%
↓ $60
15%
↓ $55
7%
↓ $45
2%
↓ $35
1%
$4,144,881 Vol.
↑ $250
1%
↑ $230
1%
↑ $210
1%
↑ $200
2%
↑ $170
2%
↑ $150
3%
↑ $130
4%
↑ $120
7%
↑ $110
11%
↑ $100
30%
↑ $95
42%
↑ $90
51%
↑ $85
78%
↓ $75
87%
↓ $70
87%
↓ $65
31%
↓ $60
15%
↓ $55
7%
↓ $45
2%
↓ $35
1%
For CME Silver (SI) futures contracts, the Active Month is the nearest of CME's designated delivery-cycle months (March, May, July, September, December) that is not the spot month. The Active Month becomes a non-active month effective on its First Position Date, at which point the next eligible contract month becomes the Active Month.
Only the Active Month's official settlement price published by CME Group will be considered. Intraday trades, highs, lows, bids, offers, midpoint values, or indicative prices do not count.
Note that the settlement price may differ from the last traded price. CME's methodology to determine the settlement price can vary by commodity and contract.
Only days on which CME publishes an official settlement price for the Active Month will be included. Days without settlement prices (weekends, holidays, or market closures) are ignored.
This market will resolve based on the settlement price as it appears on the CME settlement page at the time it is first published for that trading day, regardless of any later corrections or updates.
The resolution source for this market is the CME Group website — specifically, the daily "Settlement" price for the Active Month of Silver (SI) futures.
Market Opened: Dec 26, 2025, 6:28 PM ET
Resolver
0x65070BE91...For CME Silver (SI) futures contracts, the Active Month is the nearest of CME's designated delivery-cycle months (March, May, July, September, December) that is not the spot month. The Active Month becomes a non-active month effective on its First Position Date, at which point the next eligible contract month becomes the Active Month.
Only the Active Month's official settlement price published by CME Group will be considered. Intraday trades, highs, lows, bids, offers, midpoint values, or indicative prices do not count.
Note that the settlement price may differ from the last traded price. CME's methodology to determine the settlement price can vary by commodity and contract.
Only days on which CME publishes an official settlement price for the Active Month will be included. Days without settlement prices (weekends, holidays, or market closures) are ignored.
This market will resolve based on the settlement price as it appears on the CME settlement page at the time it is first published for that trading day, regardless of any later corrections or updates.
The resolution source for this market is the CME Group website — specifically, the daily "Settlement" price for the Active Month of Silver (SI) futures.
Resolver
0x65070BE91...Silver prices, currently trading near $77 per ounce after a sharp 10% drop this week from two-month highs above $86, reflect trader focus on mixed macro signals and persistent industrial demand. Hotter-than-expected April CPI data reinforced higher-for-longer Federal Reserve expectations, curbing near-term rate-cut prospects and pressuring precious metals while the U.S. dollar firmed. Offsetting this, structural deficits—projected at 46 million ounces for 2026—stem from robust solar, electric vehicle, and AI-driven fabrication demand amid constrained mine supply. The gold-silver ratio near 62:1 highlights silver’s leveraged sensitivity to real yields and risk sentiment. Key near-term catalysts include the June 11 CPI release and the June 16–17 FOMC meeting, where any dovish policy tilt could support a rebound toward June settlement levels.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data. This is not trading advice and plays no role in how this market resolves. · Updated


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