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Silver Crash: Lessons from Silver's Blow-Off Top

Key Takeaways

  • Bearish technical indicators aligned before silver's crash.
  • The current silver peak mirrors historical blow-off tops in 1980 & 2011.
  • Equities could fall in unison with silver over the coming days.

Silver Completes Blow-Off Top

On January 15th, I wrote an article titled,“Repeat of History? Why Silver May Be Forming a Blow-Off Top?" Friday, silver and the iShares Silver ETF ((SLV - Free Report) ) each dropped nearly 40% intraday, marking one of the precious metal’s worst drops over the past century.

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Image Source: TradingView

“Wall Street never changes, the pockets change, the suckers change, the stocks change, but Wall Street never changes, because human nature never changes.” ~ Jesse Livermore

While I don’t claim to have a crystal ball and I am only human and often incorrect in my analysis, studying silver’s illustrious history provided me with critical clues. Some of the clues that a blow-off top was about to occur included:

·       Distance from 200-day moving average: Silver was more than 100% above its 200-day moving average. Historically, such a wide distance from the 200-day has been unsustainable.

·       Exhaustion gaps emerged: An exhaustion gap occurs when a stock or ETF gaps higher in overnight trading after a sustained price move. Prior to silver’s plunge, the SLV ETF flashed four classic exhaustion gaps.

·       Record trading volume: SLV and silver proxies like the Sprott Physical Silver Trust ((PSLV - Free Report) ),  Global Silver Miners ETF ((SIL - Free Report) ), and the ProShares Ultra Silver ETF ((AGQ - Free Report) ), flashed record trading volumes. Record trading volumes after a large price advance are a classic signal that a trade has become obvious to the crowd and “irrational exuberance” has kicked in.

·       261.8% Fib level: Fibonacci extensions are used by technicians to identify price targets. Silver touched the 261.8% fib extension target (nearly to the penny) before dropping.

Zacks Investment Research
Image Source: TradingView

Zacks Investment Research
Image Source: TradingView

While the losses in silver were due to a combination of profit-taking, a rebounding U.S. dollar, and a new Fed Chair, the price action told the story in advance.

Has Silver Topped?

If history is any guide (and it has been a great one for silver), silver has just witnessed a multi-year top. Silver had two similar blow-off tops:

1.      Hunt Brothers: In 1980, silver topped when the Hunt Brothers attempted (but failed) to corner the silver market. Silver would not breach the spike high for another 30 years.

2.      Early 2000s Commodity Bull: After the early 2000s, China-driven bull market, silver again had a screaming bull market that ended in 2011 in blow-off top form. Silver would not make another high for 13 years.

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Image Source: TradingView

Silver Top: What are the Implications for Equities?

Over the long-term, silver is often moderately correlated with equities, as a strong economy drives industrial demand. Over the past two years, the correlation between silver and equities has grown closer as silver is used in fast-growing technologies such as semiconductors, electric vehicles, and AI data centers.

After silver topped in 1980, markets were lower and more volatile for a few weeks before bottoming. However, with the silver and equity correlation having grown closer in recent months, investors may want to look at 2011 as a possible precedent. In 2011, the S&P 500 fell ~11% in five trading sessions after silver topped.

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Image Source: TradingView

Bottom Line

The recent 40% intraday plunge in silver isn’t just a localized event; it is a stark reminder that human nature – and its tendency toward “irrational exuberance” – remains the market’s ultimate constant. As silver’s industrial ties to the AI sector have strengthened, its downfall may no longer be a side show but instead a leading indicator for stocks.

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