Financial Post
EN
Silver Investment Demand Set to Surge 20% as Supply Deficit Deepens
Issued on behalf of Americore Resources Corp. VANCOUVER, British Columbia, March 11, 2026 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — USANewsGroup.com Sector Commentary — Physical investment demand for silver is on track to jump 20% in 2026, with bar and coin purchases climbing to 227 million ounces as Western buyers re-enter the market alongside sustained Indian appetite[1]. The capital […]
Read original on financialpost.com ↗Positive for markets
Sentiment score: +75/100
Moderate impact
Medium-term (weeks)
WHAT THIS MEANS
Silver investment demand is projected to surge 20% in 2026 to 227 million ounces, driven by Western buyer re-entry and sustained Indian demand, while supply deficits are deepening. This supply-demand imbalance is expected to support higher silver prices throughout the year.
AI CONFIDENCE
0% Low
SENTIMENT GAUGE
NEWS POWER SCORE
AFFECTED ASSETS
↑
Gold Futures
GC=FCommodity
Expected to rise
Silver supply deficit with 20% surge in investment demand supports precious metals complex
↑
Oil (WTI Crude)
CL=FCommodity
Expected to rise
Risk-on sentiment from commodity demand recovery benefits energy sector
⇅
Euro / US Dollar
EURUSDCurrency
High volatility expected
Precious metals strength typically correlates with USD weakness, supporting EUR appreciation
↑
S&P 500
^GSPCIndex
Expected to rise
Commodity rally and inflation expectations support equity markets
PRICE HISTORY
Loading chart...
⚡ SUGGESTED ACTION
Long precious metals exposure through silver ETFs or mining equities; consider tactical positions in commodity-linked indices. Monitor supply data and Western institutional inflows as key catalysts for sustained upside.
KEY SIGNALS
SECTORS INVOLVED
Analysis generated on Mar 12, 2026 at 01:21 UTC
Disclaimer: This analysis is generated by artificial intelligence for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice, investment recommendation, or solicitation. Original reporting by Financial Post. Always conduct your own research and consult a qualified financial advisor before making investment decisions.
Bloomberg Markets
Financial Post