Silver Price Today –
21 May 2026 +126.2% YoY
Silver rose +2.71% to $75.67 on May 20 as Trump declared the Iran deal was in its “final stages” — pushing oil lower and reducing inflation fears. India’s rate is steady at ₹285/gram (₹2,85,000/kg) nationally, with Hyderabad at ₹290/gram. But HSBC warns silver remains “fundamentally overvalued.” And three major silver miners just reported falling Q1 output. Here is your complete Thursday morning analysis.
Silver Climbs +2.71% as Trump Says Iran Nuclear Deal Is in “Final Stages”
Silver climbed above $76 an ounce on Wednesday, May 20 amid growing hopes that the US-Iran conflict could soon be resolved after reports indicated that President Trump said a deal was in its “final stages.” The prospect of easing geopolitical tensions helped push oil prices lower for a second consecutive session, fuelling expectations that the inflationary impact of the recent energy shock may remain contained — reducing pressure on central banks to raise interest rates further. For silver, lower expected rates mean lower opportunity cost of holding the metal, and lower inflation reduces the urgency for the Fed to hike — a double bullish catalyst.
Aaj ka chandi ka bhav — Thursday, 21 May 2026. Silver is attempting a recovery today after Iran deal optimism pushed it up 2.71% yesterday. India’s national rate is ₹285/gram (₹2,85,000/kg) with Hyderabad at ₹290/gram. Globally, silver at $75.67 is 37.8% below its January all-time high of $121.67 but up 126.2% year-on-year. The big question today: can silver break above the $76–$83 resistance zone? And what does HSBC’s “fundamentally overvalued” call really mean? Read on for the honest, data-driven answer.
🪙 Silver Rate Today in India — 21 May 2026
Three separate live sources all confirm today’s India silver rate: Goodreturns (national): ₹285/gram, ₹2,85,000/kg. Policybazaar: ₹285/gram, ₹2,850 per 10 grams. Goodreturns (Hyderabad-specific): ₹290/gram, ₹2,90,000/kg. CoinDCX analysis (as of May 2026) references silver around ₹260/gram as a baseline, with MCX futures at approximately ₹2,75,500/kg. The spread between city prices (₹285–₹290/gram) reflects local demand, taxes, and dealer premiums.
India’s retail silver (₹285–₹290/gram) and MCX futures (~₹2,55,000–₹2,75,500/kg) differ because: (1) Retail prices include 15% import duty + 3% GST + dealer margins; (2) MCX futures prices reflect upcoming delivery contracts and are net of some of these charges; (3) Price discovery on MCX is near-real-time, while retail prices update by mid-morning. USD/INR: ₹96.28. CoinDCX analysis notes Indian silver buyers pay roughly 15–18% above international spot before any retailer margin — this gap is the import duty + GST structure.
🏙️ City-Wise Silver Rate Today — 21 May 2026
| City | ₹ per Gram | ₹ per 10g | ₹ per 100g | ₹ per Kg | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Delhi | ₹285 | ₹2,850 | ₹28,500 | ₹2,85,000 | Goodreturns |
| Mumbai | ₹285 | ₹2,850 | ₹28,500 | ₹2,85,000 | Goodreturns |
| Hyderabad | ₹290 | ₹2,900 | ₹29,000 | ₹2,90,000 | Goodreturns city |
| Chennai | ~₹285–₹290 | ~₹2,850–₹2,900 | ~₹28,500–₹29,000 | ~₹2,85,000–₹2,90,000 | Est. (traditional premium) |
| Kolkata | ₹285 | ₹2,850 | ₹28,500 | ₹2,85,000 | National avg |
| Bengaluru | ₹285 | ₹2,850 | ₹28,500 | ₹2,85,000 | National avg |
| Ahmedabad | ₹285 | ₹2,850 | ₹28,500 | ₹2,85,000 | National avg |
| Pune | ₹285 | ₹2,850 | ₹28,500 | ₹2,85,000 | National avg |
| Jaipur | ₹285 | ₹2,850 | ₹28,500 | ₹2,85,000 | National avg |
| Lucknow | ₹285 | ₹2,850 | ₹28,500 | ₹2,85,000 | National avg |
| Surat | ₹285 | ₹2,850 | ₹28,500 | ₹2,85,000 | National avg |
| Patna | ₹285 | ₹2,850 | ₹28,500 | ₹2,85,000 | National avg |
*Goodreturns national rate ₹285/gram confirmed by both Goodreturns and Policybazaar for 21 May 2026. Hyderabad confirmed separately at ₹290/gram by Goodreturns city page. Rates exclude 3% GST and making charges. CoinDCX notes prices “may vary across cities due to local demand, taxes, dealer premiums, and USD-INR movement, with cities like Chennai and Hyderabad often trading at a premium.” Verify before purchase.
📊 MCX Silver Rate Today — Levels & Technical Signal
MCX silver futures are trading at approximately ₹2,75,500 per kg as of May 2026, per CoinDCX analysis. The retail spot of ₹2,85,000/kg is higher, reflecting the full import duty and GST stack on physical delivery. Investing.com’s XAG/USD data shows today’s (May 21) range as $75.29–$75.99/oz with the previous close at $75.85. Technical signals on Investing.com currently show a “Strong Buy” daily signal for silver futures — the same signal that preceded the January 2026 ATH rally.
Investing.com’s daily technical signal for XAG/USD is currently rated “Strong Buy”. Silver is trading above the VC PMI weekly mean — a “bullish structural posture.” The key breakout level to watch is $76–$77/oz internationally (MCX ~₹2,82,000/kg). A confirmed close above $77 would signal re-entry into the bull structure and could target $83–$85 in coming weeks. TradingView analysts have a price target of $90/oz from a confirmed bullish reversal above this zone.
🌍 International Silver Spot Price — 21 May 2026
Trading Economics confirmed silver rose to $75.67 on May 20 — up 2.71% from the previous day — the second consecutive day of gains after the Trump Iran “final stages” report. Investing.com historical data shows XAG/USD at $80.1680 with the previous close at $80.3474, a 52-week range of $31.64 to $121.67, and a year-on-year change of +144.9%. Today (May 21), Investing.com’s live feed shows XAG/USD at $75.6610 with the day’s range of $75.29–$75.99.
| Metric | Value | Source | Context |
|---|---|---|---|
| Today’s Rate (May 21) | $75.6610/oz | Investing.com live | Range: $75.29–$75.99 |
| May 20 Close | $75.67 (+2.71%) | Trading Economics | Iran deal “final stages” |
| May 20 Range | $79.11–$80.35/oz | Investing.com historical | Wide intraday range |
| 52-week Low | $31.64/oz | Investing.com | May 2025 (a year ago) |
| 52-week High (ATH) | $121.67/oz | APMEX (Jan 29, 2026) | All-time nominal high |
| % Below ATH | −37.8% | Calculated | Deep correction from peak |
| 1-month change | −1.22% | Trading Economics | Slight monthly decline |
| Year-on-Year | +126.20% / +144.9% | Trading Econ / Investing.com | vs. May 2025 ~$31/oz |
| Gold/Silver Ratio | 61.2:1 | USAGOLD (May 19) | Silver underperforming gold |
📆 Silver This Week — Day-by-Day Recap
“Silver climbed above $76 an ounce on Wednesday amid growing hopes that the US-Iran conflict could soon be resolved, after reports indicated that President Trump said a deal with Iran was in its ‘final stages’. The prospect of easing geopolitical tensions helped push oil prices lower for a second consecutive session, fueling expectations that the inflationary impact of the recent energy shock may remain contained.” — Trading Economics, May 20, 2026
🏦 HSBC Says Silver “Fundamentally Overvalued” — Full Analysis
HSBC: “Silver Remains Fundamentally Overvalued After Wartime Slump”
HSBC released a research note on May 14, 2026 (reported by CNBC) stating that silver “remains fundamentally overvalued after wartime slump.” This was a significant institutional call that contributed to silver’s May 15 crash of 10.61% and has shaped the cautious narrative around silver in May 2026. HSBC’s argument is that silver’s price — even at the post-ATH discounted level of $73–$80/oz — is not fully justified by industrial fundamentals alone and relies heavily on the geopolitical safe-haven premium built up during the US-Iran war.
HSBC’s key argument in plain language: Silver’s January 2026 ATH of $121.67 was driven partly by war-related safe-haven demand and speculative excess. Now that the war is at a potential turning point (Iran deal negotiations), the safe-haven premium is deflating — and HSBC believes the “true” fundamental value of silver, based on industrial demand and mine supply alone, is lower than current prices.
The Counter-Argument — Why HSBC May Be Wrong Long-Term
The Silver Institute confirmed a 67M oz deficit for 2026 — the sixth consecutive year of supply shortfall. HSBC’s “overvalued” call doesn’t account for the structural scarcity that mine supply cannot quickly resolve. Deficits of this magnitude historically precede multi-year price upswings.
Global solar PV manufacturing consumed ~160M oz of silver in 2025, up 15% year-on-year. CoinDCX notes: “About 50% of demand is industrial, with uses in electronics, solar panels, and medical devices.” This industrial base is structurally growing regardless of geopolitical cycles.
If HSBC believed silver was overvalued at $87–$88/oz (the May 14 level when they published), silver has already fallen 12–15% from those levels to $75.67. The market has partly priced in their view. The remaining downside to HSBC’s “fair value” may be limited.
Investing.com notes from Silver’s data: “Three out of four major primary silver producers reported falling Q1 output — all citing the same cause.” Simultaneously, AI data center build-out and 5G infrastructure deployment are creating entirely new demand vectors for silver not reflected in pre-2024 HSBC models.
HSBC’s thesis is most bearish in the current hawkish rate environment. But if an Iran deal leads to lower oil, lower inflation, and eventual Fed rate cuts — silver’s rate-cut sensitivity historically produces a much sharper rally than gold. A deal could both deflate the safe-haven premium AND add a rate-cut premium, resulting in a net positive for silver.
USAGOLD records the gold-silver ratio at 61.2:1 as of May 19. Historical average is 40–60×. At 61.2, silver is modestly cheap relative to gold by historical standards. If the ratio reverts to 50×, silver would reach approximately $90/oz — 18.9% upside from current levels — without any change in gold’s price.
⛏️ Three Major Silver Miners Report Falling Q1 Output
Investing.com reported this week that three out of four major primary silver producers just reported their Q1 2026 results — and three reported falling output, all citing the same cause. This is a significant supply-side development that structurally tightens the silver market even further. Here is the breakdown:
Cited shared operational challenges — specific cause not yet publicly detailed by Investing.com reporting. Production curtailments are impacting supply projections.
Same cause cited as Producer #1 — indicating an industry-wide supply constraint rather than company-specific issues. Three of four producers citing identical cause suggests a systematic problem.
Fourth consecutive quarter of subdued output. Silvercorp Metals reports Q4 fiscal 2026 results today (Thursday) — markets are watching for guidance on H2 2026 production recovery.
Investors are weighing whether the Canadian miner can recover output in H2 2026. Results release tonight. Any positive guidance could catalyse a silver futures rally.
Silver mine supply grows at just 1–2% per year globally — and is already in a 6th consecutive annual deficit. Three of four major producers reporting falling Q1 output means the 2026 deficit projection of 67M oz (Silver Institute) may actually be wider than forecast when final Q2–Q4 data arrives. This is structurally bullish for silver prices, directly contradicting HSBC’s “overvalued” thesis which assumes stable or growing supply.
📰 Top News Moving Silver Today
Silver climbed above $76 on Wednesday as Trump said the Iran nuclear deal was in its “final stages.” The prospect of easing tensions pushed oil lower for a second session, reducing inflation and rate-hike expectations. For silver, this is a dual catalyst: lower rates reduce the cost of holding non-yielding precious metals, while a peaceful reopening of the Strait of Hormuz would reduce the inflationary environment that has been weighing on all commodities. However, today Trump also separately warned Iran strikes could resume in “two or three days” — the situation remains extremely volatile.
HSBC’s research note declaring silver “fundamentally overvalued” (CNBC, May 14) was a key contributor to silver’s 10.61% crash on May 15. The bank argues silver’s price relies too heavily on war-driven safe-haven demand and does not fully reflect industrial fundamentals. However, critics note that HSBC’s analysis precedes the miner output data showing three of four major producers reporting Q1 production declines — a supply-side development HSBC may not have fully modelled.
Investing.com reported that three of four major primary silver producers reported falling Q1 2026 output, all citing the same operational cause. This industry-wide supply constraint directly tightens the 2026 supply outlook. Silvercorp Metals reports its Q4 fiscal 2026 results today (Thursday) — investors are watching for H2 production guidance that could be a positive catalyst for silver futures if the miner signals a recovery in output.
The US Manufacturing and Services PMI for May releases today. For silver specifically: a weak PMI (<50) confirms the stagflation narrative — manufacturing slows while inflation stays high — which is historically the most powerful bull environment for silver (industrial demand slowing + inflation hedge demand surging simultaneously). A strong PMI would reinforce rate hike fears and dollar strength, weighing on silver. Today’s PMI outcome will set the tone for silver’s direction heading into next week.
⚖️ Bulls vs Bears — The Complete Honest Analysis
🐻 The Bear Case (HSBC View + Risks)
- HSBC: “Fundamentally overvalued” — if the safe-haven war premium deflates as Iran negotiations progress, silver could fall toward the TradingView bear case of $66–$60/oz.
- Gold-silver ratio at 61.2× — widened sharply from 53.6× in early May, showing silver is underperforming gold and losing its safe-haven premium faster.
- Fed hawkish stance — FOMC minutes confirmed “uncomfortably high” inflation with no 2026 cuts. Higher rates = strong dollar = lower silver. CME Group: 97.4% probability of no June cut.
- 1-month change: −1.22% — silver has slightly underperformed even as gold held firmer. Monthly momentum is mildly bearish.
- UBS demand cut (May 15) — UBS slashed 2026 silver investment demand forecast from 400M oz to 300M oz, citing softer industrial demand and rising mine supply.
🐂 The Bull Case (Structural + Contrarian)
- +126.2% YoY — silver has more than doubled from ~$31/oz a year ago. The long-term bull market is intact.
- 6th consecutive supply deficit (67M oz, Silver Institute) — structural scarcity continues. Mine supply growing at just 1–2%/year. Three of four major producers showing falling Q1 output.
- Industrial demand structural growth — solar (160M oz/year, +15% YoY), EVs (25–50g silver each, production accelerating), AI/5G infrastructure creating new demand vectors.
- 37.8% below ATH = deepest correction — at $75.67, silver is substantially discounted from January’s $121.67. Investors who missed the initial run have a rare second entry opportunity.
- Iran deal = rate cuts = silver rocket — if peace leads to lower oil → lower inflation → Fed pivot, silver’s leverage to rate cuts historically outperforms gold 2-3× in the first year of easing.
- Silvercorp Metals reports tonight — any positive production guidance could be a near-term catalyst.
🔮 Silver Price Forecast 2026 — Expert Targets
| Institution | Silver Target (USD) | India (₹/kg) Post-Duty | Timeframe | Basis |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| J.P. Morgan | $81 avg; $85 Q4 | ~₹2,63,000–₹2,77,000 | Full year 2026 | Industrial demand + monetary |
| Commerzbank | $90/oz year-end | ~₹2,93,000 | Dec 2026 | Deficit + industrial growth |
| CoinDCX | $90–$106/oz | ~₹2.93L–₹3.45L | End 2026 | Rate cuts + deficit |
| TradingView ($90) | $90/oz (if $77 broken) | ~₹2,93,000 | Near-term bull | Technical breakout above $77 |
| TradingView ($105) | $105/oz | ~₹3,42,000 | Bull continuation | $90 confirmed, then extension |
| HSBC (bear) | Below current levels | Price compression | Near-term | “Fundamentally overvalued” |
| UBS (revised) | 300M oz demand, 60–70M oz deficit | Conservative | Full year 2026 | Softer industrial demand |
| Bear case | $66–$60/oz | ~₹2.15L–₹1.95L | If dollar surges | DXY to 100+; peace deal unwind |
*India estimates at USD/INR ₹96.28 with 15% import duty + 3% GST base. All forecasts are analyst estimates, not guarantees.
TradingView analysts widely identify $76–$77/oz as the critical resistance level for silver’s near-term direction. A confirmed daily close above $77 (MCX ~₹2,82,000–₹2,84,000/kg) would signal the bull structure has resumed and open the door to $83–$85, then $90. A rejection at $76–$77 and a fall back below $73 support would confirm HSBC’s bearish thesis. Today’s US PMI and Iran developments are the most likely catalysts to break the current $75–$77 range decisively in either direction.
💼 How to Buy Silver in India — Best Options Now
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Silver ETFs (HDFC, ICICI, Nippon India) via Monthly SIP — #1 Recommendation
Silver ETFs track international spot prices and are NOT affected by the 15% import duty (they access silver at ~$75.67/oz equivalent, significantly below India’s duty-inclusive retail ₹285/gram). SEBI regulated, backed by physical silver in approved vaults. Buy/sell on Zerodha, Groww, Upstox. A monthly SIP is ideal given today’s PMI data and Iran news — you don’t need to time the exact bottom. Zero making charges. This is how India’s smartest silver investors are accumulating today. -
Silver Mutual Funds — No Demat Account Needed
DSP Silver ETF FOF, Aditya Birla Silver ETF FOF. Monthly SIP from ₹500. No demat account required. Returns mirror ETF performance. India’s silver ETF demand has been growing alongside the metal’s rise — these funds make systematic accumulation accessible to any investor with a bank account and KYC. -
Wait for $77 Confirmation Before Lump Sum Physical
Given HSBC’s “overvalued” warning and today’s PMI volatility, a lump sum physical silver purchase before a confirmed $77/oz close carries meaningful near-term risk. If PMI today is strong and silver falls toward $73 support, buyers who wait will get better prices. Only buy physical silver today if you need it for jewellery, silverware, or a near-term gifting purpose — not for speculative investment. -
Physical Silver Bars & Coins — For Long-Term Tangible Holdings
Buy only BIS Hallmark HUID-certified 999 fine silver bars from MMTC-PAMP, India Post, or certified bullion dealers. At ₹285–₹290/gram + 3% GST, you’re paying ~18–20% above international spot due to India’s import duty structure. Best for investors wanting physical ownership with a 3–5 year holding horizon. Store in a bank locker. Always verify HUID numbers. -
Digital Silver (MMTC-PAMP/Augmont on PhonePe, GPay, Paytm)
Buy from ₹1. Backed by 999 fine physical silver. Easy entry for first-time investors. Prices track international spot (duty-efficient). Can be redeemed as physical bars or coins. Best for beginners starting their silver investment journey. Use only MMTC-PAMP or Augmont-backed platforms for safety.
At a gold-silver ratio of 61.2:1, silver is slightly expensive vs its historical average but well within normal range. Key comparison: Gold is 16.5% below its January ATH; silver is 37.8% below its January ATH — suggesting silver has more recovery potential if the bull market resumes. However, HSBC’s “overvalued” warning and the PMI/Iran uncertainty make silver the riskier of the two today. Ideal allocation for most Indian investors: 70–80% gold (SGBs/ETFs), 20–30% silver (ETFs/SIP) — gold for stability, silver for asymmetric upside when the rate-cut cycle eventually arrives.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
On 21 May 2026, silver in India is ₹285 per gram and ₹2,85,000 per kilogram (national average — Goodreturns and Policybazaar). Hyderabad is higher at ₹290/gram (₹2,90,000/kg) per Goodreturns’ city-specific page. MCX silver futures are around ₹2,75,500/kg. These are indicative rates excluding 3% GST and making charges.
Aaj 21 May 2026 ko chandi ka bhav ₹285 per gram aur ₹2,85,000 per kilogram hai (Goodreturns national average, Policybazaar confirmed). Hyderabad mein ₹290/gram (₹2,90,000/kg) hai. 10 gram chandi ki kimat ₹2,850 hai. Kal silver +2.71% upar gaya tha Iran deal “final stages” ki khabar par. Ye rates indicative hain — 3% GST alag lagta hai.
Silver rose 2.71% to $75.67 on May 20 because Trump stated the Iran nuclear deal was in its “final stages.” This prospect of easing geopolitical tensions pushed oil prices lower for a second consecutive session, reducing inflation expectations and rate-hike urgency. For silver, lower expected rates directly reduce the opportunity cost of holding the non-yielding metal, while easing inflation reduces the safe-haven premium — but simultaneously reduces the argument for further rate hikes that have been weighing on silver.
HSBC’s May 14 research note (CNBC) argued that silver’s price — even after the correction from $121.67 to $73–$80 — still relies too heavily on the geopolitical safe-haven premium built up during the US-Iran war. HSBC believes silver’s “true” fundamental value, based on industrial supply-demand dynamics alone, is lower than current prices. However, critics argue HSBC’s model doesn’t adequately account for the 6th consecutive supply deficit (67M oz), falling miner output, and the structural acceleration in solar/EV silver demand. Silver’s 37.8% fall from the ATH may already have priced in much of HSBC’s concern.
Investing.com reported this week that three of four major primary silver producers reported falling Q1 2026 output, all citing the same operational cause. While the specific cause has not been detailed publicly yet, this industry-wide pattern suggests a systematic supply constraint — potentially related to labour issues, grade decline at key mines, or regulatory delays in new project permits. Silvercorp Metals reports its Q4 fiscal 2026 results tonight (Thursday, May 21) — watch for H2 production guidance that could be a positive catalyst if the miner signals output recovery.
Silver at ₹285/gram is 37.8% below its January 2026 all-time high — a meaningful discount from the peak. Structural supply deficits and industrial demand growth (solar, EVs, AI) provide long-term support. However, HSBC’s “overvalued” warning and today’s PMI data create near-term uncertainty. Our recommendation: start or increase a Silver ETF monthly SIP this week — which eliminates the need to time the market. For lump sum physical purchases, wait for a confirmed close above $77/oz internationally (MCX ~₹2,84,000/kg) before buying aggressively. Always consult a SEBI-registered advisor before investing.
The gold-silver ratio is 61.2:1 as of May 19 (USAGOLD). This means it takes 61.2 ounces of silver to buy one ounce of gold. The historical average is 40–60×, and the recent extreme was 53.6× in early May (when silver was outperforming). At 61.2×, silver is at the upper end of recent history — slightly “expensive” relative to gold by this metric, but not at the extreme values seen in 2020 (80–120×) when silver was deeply undervalued. If the ratio returns to 55× with gold at $4,500, silver would be at ~$81.8/oz — 8.1% upside from current $75.67.
We will cover today’s US PMI impact on silver and tonight’s Silvercorp Metals Q4 results on our WhatsApp Channel and Telegram. Plus daily silver & gold rates, Iran developments, import duty updates & government scheme news every morning!