-640x358.jpg&w=1200&q=75)
Silver markets are heading into a pivotal period after the Chicago Mercantile Exchange announced a second margin increase within two weeks, effective Monday, December 29.
The CME raised the initial margin requirement for March 2026 silver futures to about $25,000, up from roughly $20,000 earlier this month.
The move increases pressure on leveraged traders as silver prices remain close to multi-year highs.
Market participants are debating whether the rally is overheating or entering a volatile consolidation phase.
Macro analyst Qinbafrank warned that the margin hikes echo historical silver peaks in 1980 and 2011.
In both episodes, repeated margin increases triggered forced deleveraging and sharp price reversals.
During the 2011 rally, silver climbed from $8.50 to nearly $50 amid zero interest rates and quantitative easing.
As prices peaked, the CME raised margins five times in nine days, pushing leveraged funds out of futures markets.
Silver subsequently fell nearly 30% within weeks.
The 1980 rally proved even more dramatic as the Hunt brothers accumulated more than 200 million ounces using leveraged futures.