When a market moves fast enough, the infrastructure has to catch up. That's exactly what happened on Tuesday, January 13, when the Chicago Mercantile Exchange decided it was time to change how it handles risk in precious metals futures.
The exchange ditched its old system of fixed dollar margin requirements per contract and moved to a percentage-based approach tied directly to contract value. It sounds technical, but the implications are straightforward: as silver prices climb, the cash traders must post to maintain positions automatically increases. It's a built-in brake system for a market that's been accelerating like crazy.
Under the previous framework, CME would only adjust margin requirements during extreme market stress, typically after the fact. Now the adjustments happen automatically as prices move, forcing traders to hold more collateral just to keep existing positions open. Less leverage, more skin in the game.
The Silver Surge
Why the sudden rule change? Look at silver's recent performance. In just the first fourteen days of 2025, spot silver rocketed more than 24%, blowing past $90 per ounce. That follows a 148% gain in 2025. These aren't normal market moves.
The rally isn't purely speculative fever. There's a real supply story here. Between 70% and 80% of global silver production comes as a byproduct of mining other metals like copper, lead, zinc, and gold. You can't just flip a switch and produce more silver when prices spike because miners aren't primarily targeting it in the first place. Supply is structurally inelastic.
Meanwhile, geopolitical tensions and shrinking inventories pushed investors toward precious metals, while softer inflation data reinforced expectations for Federal Reserve rate cuts. Consultancy firm BMI expects the global deficit to continue throughout 2025, driven by investment demand colliding with constrained physical availability.
BMI pointed out that as non-yielding assets, silver and platinum have benefited from interest rate cuts, but they've also gotten an indirect boost from elevated gold prices, which make both metals look relatively cheap, according to Mining.com. Beijing's export restrictions on physical silver since January 1 squeezed inventories in London and Zurich even tighter, briefly pushing lease rates above 8%.




