Silver just did something it's never done before: it blasted through $92 per ounce on Wednesday, leaving even seasoned precious metals traders scrambling to recalibrate their expectations. The move caps a 200% rally over the past year, and according to analysts, we might only be getting started.
The immediate catalyst looks straightforward enough. Producer price data released Wednesday showed inflation continuing to cool, following Tuesday's softer consumer price print. That reinforces expectations that the Federal Reserve will keep cutting interest rates through the rest of the year. Meanwhile, retail sales came in stronger than expected, creating an unusual situation where monetary easing seems likely even as the economy hums along.
But if you think this is just about inflation numbers and rate cuts, you're missing the bigger picture.
The Real Story: Debt, Drama, and Debasement
Safe-haven buying intensified this week after the Department of Justice opened a criminal investigation into Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell over renovation costs at the central bank's headquarters. Powell called the probe a "pretext" designed to pressure him into cutting rates faster. Whether you believe that or not, markets certainly took notice, and precious metals got a boost.
The deeper explanation, though, has less to do with any single investigation and more to do with structural forces that are reshaping how monetary policy works. In a recent interview, macro analyst Otavio Costa laid out the case that precious metals aren't experiencing a momentum trade—they're responding to fundamental changes in how governments manage debt.
"There's many reasons why metals are very cheap historically speaking, despite the nominal rise that we're seeing in terms of prices," Costa explained. He believes gold and silver are "in an early stage of a secular bull market."
The logic goes like this: as interest costs eat up more of the federal budget, the Fed faces growing constraints on how high it can push rates. Costa argues that "the path of least resistance will continue to be inflation, inflating our way out of the debt problem." In other words, the Fed's traditional mandates around inflation and employment might take a backseat to keeping government debt serviceable.
Costa also pointed to currency debasement—the slow erosion of purchasing power through money creation and debt financing. Metals often pick up on this dynamic before it shows up in official inflation data, giving investors an early signal that something's shifting beneath the surface.
And then there's the supply side. Silver markets have been running deficits for years. Liquidity in London remains tight. New mine supply hasn't kept pace with demand. That's a recipe for sustained price pressure.
AI, Data Centers, and Defense: Silver's Industrial Moment
Unlike gold, which is mostly about jewelry and safe-haven demand, silver has a serious industrial use case. And that use case is expanding rapidly.
Nikos Tzabouras, senior market analyst at Tradu.com, highlighted silver's growing role in data centers, artificial intelligence chips, clean energy technologies, and defense applications. These aren't speculative future markets—they're driving demand right now.
"Silver reaches new record highs supported by U.S. dollar weakness and safe-haven flows," Tzabouras noted, adding that geopolitical uncertainty and concerns about political interference in Fed policy are amplifying the move.




