Shanghai Silver invoice directly jumped 12%, and the short sellers were completely wiped out. Let’s see if this wave can truly lift off.
The current spot silver prices are interesting. The US reports $80, Dubai $95, India $135. But when you get spot silver in Shenzhen Shuibei, it costs more than two yuan extra per gram — the increase is nearly 15% when converted. Such a price difference is no small matter, indicating that spot silver is tight everywhere.
With such tight supply, how can silver prices not rise? Moreover, the prices have already clearly differentiated, with more expensive places even selling at higher prices, which just shows that demand is still competing for the goods. Wealthy people are willing to pay high prices for spot silver, and the logic isn’t complicated. So there’s still a chance for silver to go higher.
View Original
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
9 Likes
Reward
9
7
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
Tokenomics911
· 10h ago
The price difference in Shuibei is so large, indicating that there is indeed a genuine shortage, not just hype. The bears might really be unable to hold on this time.
View OriginalReply0
AirdropF5Bro
· 20h ago
The price difference on Shuibei is so big, which indicates that someone is really snatching spot assets, not just talk. The probability of this wave going up is indeed high.
View OriginalReply0
SatoshiHeir
· 20h ago
It should be pointed out that this wave of silver price spread differentiation precisely validates my earlier thesis — when spot supply is truly tight, the market will automatically form a premium mechanism. Based on the following argument: the 15% premium in Shuibei is itself the best falsification tool, enough to overturn those who still claim "silver is useless."
Obviously, the price difference structure among Shenzhen, Dubai, and India has already reflected the real dilemma of the global supply chain. The behavior of wealthy people抢货 (抢货 means "抢货" in Chinese, which can be translated as "snatching goods" or "buying up goods") is, in essence, the final confirmation of the value consensus.
This is not just commodity speculation; gentlemen, listen to me — this is a process of re-pricing scarcity. When the short positions are completely wiped out, the real reshuffle has just begun.
View OriginalReply0
0xLostKey
· 20h ago
Water贝 costs over two dollars per gram? The price difference is indeed significant, but I still have some doubts about whether it can really pick up... This kind of signal has appeared a few times in previous years.
View OriginalReply0
OfflineNewbie
· 20h ago
Over there in Shuibei, it's more than two yuan per gram? Damn, they're about to harvest our retail investors' gains again.
View OriginalReply0
GateUser-40edb63b
· 20h ago
Is the price in Shuibei increased by more than two yuan? What are they crazy about? Is this really a global arbitrage spectacle? Haha
View OriginalReply0
PumpBeforeRug
· 20h ago
The price hike over in Shuibei is so aggressive; it was obvious early on that the trend was off. The bears don't stand a chance.
Shanghai Silver invoice directly jumped 12%, and the short sellers were completely wiped out. Let’s see if this wave can truly lift off.
The current spot silver prices are interesting. The US reports $80, Dubai $95, India $135. But when you get spot silver in Shenzhen Shuibei, it costs more than two yuan extra per gram — the increase is nearly 15% when converted. Such a price difference is no small matter, indicating that spot silver is tight everywhere.
With such tight supply, how can silver prices not rise? Moreover, the prices have already clearly differentiated, with more expensive places even selling at higher prices, which just shows that demand is still competing for the goods. Wealthy people are willing to pay high prices for spot silver, and the logic isn’t complicated. So there’s still a chance for silver to go higher.