DBT Bureau
Pune, 3 March 2026
Silver experienced a dramatic 15% collapse from a peak of $96.40 to a low of $81.85 on March 3, 2026. This “flash crash” was triggered by a surging US Dollar Index (99.20) and rising 10-year Treasury yields (4.07%), which diminished the appeal of non-yielding metals. While geopolitical tensions initially spiked prices, fears of a Strait of Hormuz closure shifted the narrative toward a global industrial slowdown, hurting silver’s solar-sector demand. Coupled with hot ISM manufacturing data pushing Fed rate cuts to September and massive COMEX margin liquidations, investors pivoted from silver toward the safety of the Greenback, according to a report by Kedia Advisory.
Highlights
- Price Movement: Silver has faced extreme volatility after a massive geopolitical spike to $96.40, prices collapsed toward $81.85 today, representing an over 15% swing from the high.
- Surge in Dollar Index: The US Dollar Index (DXY) rose sharply to 99.20, its highest level since late January, making silver expensive.
- Treasury Yield Spike: The 10-year US Treasury yield climbed 10 basis points to 4.07%, increasing the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding silver.
- Massive Profit Taking: Investors liquidated positions after silver hit a sudden peak of $96.40 on Monday, leading to a sharp reversal.
- Strait of Hormuz Industrial Risk: Closure of the Strait threatens 20% of global energy, signaling a massive industrial slowdown for silver-heavy solar sectors.
- Hot Manufacturing Inflation: The ISM Manufacturing Prices Index jumped 11.5 points to 70.5, fueling fears that inflation will stay high.
- Deferred Fed Rate Cuts: Markets pushed back expectations for the next Federal Reserve rate cut from July to September 2026 today.
- Paper vs. Physical Spread: Widening gaps between paper futures and physical prices led to deleveraging in the high-volume COMEX silver market.
- Iran Strike Impact Shifting: Initial “safe-haven” buying cooled as focus moved from the military strikes to the resulting global economic contraction.
- Margin Call Liquidations: Heavy losses in global equity markets forced leveraged traders to sell silver to cover margin calls on other assets.





















