Close Menu
Invest Intellect
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Invest Intellect
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    • Home
    • Commodities
    • Cryptocurrency
    • Fintech
    • Investments
    • Precious Metal
    • Property
    • Stock Market
    Invest Intellect
    Home»Precious Metal»Bullion market gears up for ‘Silver Thursday’ as CME Group raises margin, cuts limits
    Precious Metal

    Bullion market gears up for ‘Silver Thursday’ as CME Group raises margin, cuts limits

    December 27, 20254 Mins Read


    With silver prices topping $79 an ounce and gaining 18 per cent last week, the trade wonders if it would witness another “Silver Thursday” or “Silver Rule 7” will have an impact after the US-based CME Group has come up with new regulations.

    On December 26 (Friday), the CME Group, which operates major derivatives exchanges such as CME, COMEX, CBOT and NYMEX, announced it was imposing a $25,000 initial margin for March 2026 silver derivative contracts. Earlier, it was imposing $20,000 margin.

    If investors do not have the required amount in their accounts by Monday, their positions will be liquidated. In addition, CME has lowered position limits. Traders said the CME was trying to protect those who had gone short (selling without stocks on hand) in the futures market. 

    Technical vacuum

    “The CME is creating a technical vacuum designed to force you out of your positions,” said a trader. The impact of the CME move was visible on the Shanghai Futures Exchange on Saturday, when silver prices dropped to 19,184 Chinese yuan a kg ($77.38 an ounce) for March contracts after rising to 19,209 yuan ($77.48).

    The development comes amid fears of market manipulation, but traders said the CME group has come back with its “Silver Thursday” strategy. 

    During the weekend, silver ended at $79.11, while March futures slipped lower to $77.19 from $79.7. In India, silver ended the week in the Mumbai market at ₹2,32,100 a kg. On MCX, silver closed at ₹2,40,935. 

    Silver has gained 174 per cent so far this year, more than gold’s 73 per cent but a tad lower than platinum’s 180 per cent. Traders said silver is reminding the trade of the events that unfolded in the 1970s, when it soared to $50 an ounce. 

    When Hunts hunted silver

    The only change is that its use has expanded to electric vehicles (EVs), solar panels, electronics and the medical sector. In the 1970s, the then US president Richard Nixon cut off the dollar’s link with gold. 

    Hunt brothers, Nelson and William, decided to take control of the silver market. They began mopping up silver at $2 an ounce. They garnered a huge share of the market and airlifted silver bars to Swiss vaults several times, which pushed up prices to $50 an ounce. 

    Then, jewellery manufacturers began melting stocks to make money from rising silver, and many sold their family silver. The problem resulted in a jeweller, Tiffany and Co, running a full page advertisement in the New York Times criticising the manipulation in the silver market. 

    The white precious metal’s price was reined in after Comex (Commodity Exchange) stepped in to impose trade limits. It led to prices nosediving by 50 per cent on a single day. It plunged to $10 from $50 in two months. It is recalled as “Silver Thursday”. 

    Move to curb at $75?

    Similarly, in 2011, when silver hit $49.5 an ounce, the CME raised the margin five times within 10 days. It plunged prices by 30 per cent in a couple of weeks.

    A market analyst said on “X” (formerly Twitter) that six global “powerful” financiers, including a CME official, had decided to curb silver’s rise beyond $75 an ounce. However, physical traders stepped in to counter the move.

    The analyst said there were 41,000 call options contracts at $75 “strike”, which means the precious metal has to be delivered if prices top the level. The analyst said the fear was that there could be demand for delivery for these option trades. 

    The volume involved is 200 million ounces, whereas COMEX has an inventory of only 24.8 million ounces. This could only result in silver bursting through to $100 an ounce.

    Chinese curbs

     According to traders, the Chinese curbs on silver exports from January have begun to play out in the market. In addition, for every ounce of physical silver available in the market, over 300 ounces have been sold. 

    Silver’s current phenomenal run is being attributed to geopolitical crisis, lack of confidence in the dollar, tariff war and concerns over the global economy. In addition, the market has been facing a physical deficit since 2020, with a lack of new investments in the mining sector. 

    Published on December 28, 2025



    Source link

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

    Related Posts

    Silver rate today: Silver price in India tops ₹2.50 lakh/kg, US Supreme Court tariff decision in focus

    Precious Metal

    Gold and silver under scrutiny as index changes spark wave of bullion sales – Financial Times

    Precious Metal

    Surge Copper completes 2025 programme advancing Berg project toward prefeasibility

    Precious Metal

    Motilal Oswal explains why gold and silver may stay firm in 2026

    Precious Metal

    Gold (XAUUSD) & Silver Price Forecast: Triangle Setups Hold as Markets Eye NFP Risk

    Precious Metal

    Gold, silver prices cool in India: Why experts see this as a pause, not a reversal

    Precious Metal
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Top Picks
    Commodities

    Weaker iron ore prices hit Rio Tinto earnings

    Commodities

    EU delays deforestation law again, as Indonesian palm oil sector pushes for smallholder exemptions | News | Eco-Business

    Fintech

    Fintech Velocity announces Rs. 400 crore festive season fund for D2C and e-commerce brands

    Editors Picks

    Need to increase R&D investments to strengthen agri: ICAR DG

    August 3, 2025

    Six Global Energy Trends Shaping the Middle East in 2026

    January 8, 2026

    Thunes Powers the Next Generation of Global Money Movement with Instant Payouts in Stablecoins Across 130+ Countries

    October 27, 2025

    5 things to know before the stock market opens Tuesday, October 29

    October 29, 2024
    What's Hot

    Commercial Property Capital Values Increase for Third Consecutive Month, According to CBRE

    August 8, 2024

    Kirstie Allsopp leads fury over Labour’s ‘pathetic’ house-buying reforms – and fears Keir Starmer will roll out digital IDs to get on the property ladder

    October 6, 2025

    Cryptocurrency promoters on X amplify China-aligned disinformation

    October 29, 2024
    Our Picks

    Sustainable bonds planned amid tight global markets – Business

    August 18, 2025

    Oleksandr Usyk issues new retirement date in U-turn over career

    October 16, 2025

    Cost of Living Crisis: Improving Agricultural Productivity

    July 20, 2024
    Weekly Top

    Late Retirement Causing Career Bottleneck for Younger Generation

    January 9, 2026

    UK households can get £255 energy bill refund thanks to two-month rule

    January 9, 2026

    Cap Rate Compression vs. Regulatory Alpha: Ferit Samuray on Why Dubai Real Estate Defies Global Yield Logic

    January 9, 2026
    Editor's Pick

    Gold price dives to two-week low as US-China trade deal hopes undermine safe-haven demand

    April 30, 2025

    La filiale d’Axiata cède 87,5 % de sa participation dans EDOTCO Investments Singapore à Zillion Tower

    June 16, 2025

    What Can People in the UK Expect From the Arrival of 6G Technology?

    October 31, 2025
    © 2026 Invest Intellect
    • Contact us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.