In the past ten days or so, the changes in the silver market have been somewhat unexpected.
Since the last analysis was published, a lot has happened—China announced that starting January 1st next year, silver exports will require a license, which is a significant signal. Meanwhile, the physical silver price in Shanghai once surged to $91, while the settlement price on the New York Mercantile Exchange was only $77, showing a clear price gap between the two locations. The London forward curve is still struggling with a spot premium, although not as extreme as in October, the price structure remains inverted. Additionally, the Chicago Mercantile Exchange temporarily increased the silver margin requirements, indicating that the market is indeed re-pricing volatility.
I spent the entire afternoon monitoring the market, analyzing various data and signals, trying to determine how these changes might influence the future trend. The conclusion is—it's not a good time to increase positions in the short term.
My plan is simple: wait and see if there's a pullback opportunity before taking action, while using options for flexible positioning. This is the real challenge in practical trading. Most trading books teach you how to cut losses and manage positions, but they never teach you what to do when your logic is validated successfully, or even overly successful. At that point, it's not just about capital management anymore; it's more about whether you can control your emotions.
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FlatlineTrader
· 11h ago
Waiting for the correction, the price gap is so large, you have to be patient. Greedy for quick gains and you might easily get burned.
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MondayYoloFridayCry
· 11h ago
Really, the current spread is extremely abnormal, Shanghai 91, New York 77. With such a big difference, who dares to move casually?
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WalletsWatcher
· 11h ago
Wait, Shanghai $91, New York $77? I've really never seen such a price difference before.
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RooftopVIP
· 12h ago
Wait for the pullback before getting in. There's really no rush this time; I've already prepared options in advance.
In the past ten days or so, the changes in the silver market have been somewhat unexpected.
Since the last analysis was published, a lot has happened—China announced that starting January 1st next year, silver exports will require a license, which is a significant signal. Meanwhile, the physical silver price in Shanghai once surged to $91, while the settlement price on the New York Mercantile Exchange was only $77, showing a clear price gap between the two locations. The London forward curve is still struggling with a spot premium, although not as extreme as in October, the price structure remains inverted. Additionally, the Chicago Mercantile Exchange temporarily increased the silver margin requirements, indicating that the market is indeed re-pricing volatility.
I spent the entire afternoon monitoring the market, analyzing various data and signals, trying to determine how these changes might influence the future trend. The conclusion is—it's not a good time to increase positions in the short term.
My plan is simple: wait and see if there's a pullback opportunity before taking action, while using options for flexible positioning. This is the real challenge in practical trading. Most trading books teach you how to cut losses and manage positions, but they never teach you what to do when your logic is validated successfully, or even overly successful. At that point, it's not just about capital management anymore; it's more about whether you can control your emotions.