Abstract:Silver prices experienced extreme volatility, plunging over 5% after the US delayed new tariffs on critical minerals. Long-term bulls face headwinds as the solar industry accelerates 'thrifting' to reduce silver consumption.

Silver (XAG/USD) witnessed a dramatic session of two-way volatility, plunging over 7% before paring losses to close down roughly 1%, as traders reacted to shifting US trade policies and concerning developments in industrial demand.
The primary catalyst for the sharp sell-off was the announcement that the Trump administration is pausing plans to impose immediate tariffs on critical minerals, opting instead for bilateral negotiations. Speculators who had piled into Silver—anticipating supply chain disruptions—rapidly unwound long positions. The removal of the immediate tariff threat triggered a liquidity flush, sending spot prices tumbling from near-record highs.
While policy noise drives short-term flows, a more systemic risk is emerging in the photovoltaic (PV) sector, Silvers largest industrial consumer.
Technical analysts at StoneX note that while the tariff news caused a washout, the physical market remains tight. However, the dual headwinds of reduced geopolitical risk premium and industrial demand destruction suggest the “one-way traffic” rally for Silver may be transitioning into a volatile consolidation phase. The Gold/Silver ratio has dipped to near 50, a level often signaling that Silver is historically expensive relative to Gold, inviting mean reversion.