Silver / U.S. DollarSilver / U.S. DollarSilver / U.S. Dollar

Silver / U.S. Dollar

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About Silver / U.S. Dollar


Silver Prices have been followed for centuries. Silver (XAG) is a precious metal used in jewelry, silverware, electronics, and currency. Silver prices are widely followed in financial markets around the world. Silver has been traded for thousands of years and was once used for currency backing. Silver continues to be one of the most commonly traded commodities today. Silver prices are highly volatile due to speculation and supply and demand. Ag is the chemical symbol for silver on the periodic table of elements and its ISO currency symbol is XAG.

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Displays a symbol's price movements over previous years to identify recurring trends.

Frequently asked questions


Depending on your goals and risk tolerance, there are several ways you can invest in silver. The most direct is buying physical silver — in the form of coins, bars, or bullion. This way, you can hold the metal in your hands. However, it also means you'll have to consider storage, insurance, and liquidity, since selling physical silver can take longer than trading on the markets.

Another option is buying silver ETFs, which track the price of silver without requiring you to own the metal itself. These funds provide exposure to silver's price movements and are easy to trade. Filter and browse silver ETFs in our ETF Screener.

If you're looking for a higher-risk, potentially higher-reward approach, you can also buy stocks of silver mining companies. These shares often move in line with silver prices but can also be influenced by company performance, production costs, and broader market trends.

If you decide to invest in silver through exchange-traded instruments, you'll need a broker to access the market. Choose a broker that fits your needs from our brokers list, connect your account, and start trading directly on TradingView.
Silver reached its all-time high of 121.630 USD on Jan 29, 2026, and its all-time low of 13.787 USD on Apr 1, 2020. Explore more price history on the silver price chart.
Besides silver, traders often watch several other precious metals:

- Gold: The most widely recognized precious metal, used as a hedge against inflation and currency risk
- Platinum: Widely used in the automotive sector; its price can be influenced by supply constraints and industrial demand
- Palladium: Key for catalytic converters in vehicles, palladium is highly sensitive to automotive market trends and environmental regulations
- Copper: While technically a base metal, it's often monitored alongside precious metals because of its economic sensitivity and industrial demand

Traders track these metals for portfolio diversification or hedging against inflation.
Traders track silver because it's both a precious metal and an industrial commodity, sensitive to economic, financial, and geopolitical developments. Its price reflects inflation, currency changes, and industrial demand from electronics, solar panels, and medical devices, helping traders hedge risk and spot short-term market opportunities.

On TradingView, you can monitor the live silver chart, follow the latest news, and keep track of events that influence prices through the Economic Calendar — from inflation to central bank announcements.
Silver's scarcity and use in electronics, medicine, and renewable tech help it hold value even in downturns. For investors, it can act as a hedge against inflation and a tool for portfolio diversification.

However, silver is also volatile, reacting sharply to industrial demand and market sentiment. It's rarely recycled, which limits liquidity, and while it can shine in recessions, it often trails stocks when markets rise.

Before investing, take time to analyze the market: track the price on the silver chart to study trends and follow global news and economic events — such as interest rate decisions or inflation reports — that can influence silver prices.
Several major commodity indices include silver as part of their broader coverage of raw materials. The Bloomberg Silver Index and the S&P Goldman Sachs Commodity Index (S&P GSCI) track silver futures alongside other precious and industrial metals. These indices reflect silver's role in the global economy, balancing its dual identity as both a monetary metal and an industrial material.

For investors interested in the companies that produce silver rather than the metal itself, there are equity indices focused on silver miners: the Nasdaq Sprott Silver Miners Index specifically tracks stocks of silver mining companies. It gives exposure to the performance of silver producers, which can often be more volatile — but also offer higher potential returns — than silver prices alone.
Investors turn to silver for its unique mix of scarcity and utility. Unlike purely monetary metals, silver plays a crucial role in modern industries — from solar energy and electronics to medicine. This real-world demand supports its value beyond investor speculation and gives it the potential to benefit from technological and renewable energy growth.

At the same time, silver remains a traditional store of value, often viewed as a cheaper alternative to gold. It can protect portfolios from inflation and currency swings, while offering greater price movement for those seeking higher short-term gains. However, that same volatility makes silver more unpredictable, rewarding investors who understand both its industrial and financial dynamics.

Keep an eye on silver trading ideas to see what other traders think and find inspiration for your own investing strategies.
Silver is a precious metal known for its bright luster, high conductivity, and versatility. It has been used for thousands of years as currency, jewelry, and a symbol of wealth. Today, it remains valuable both as a raw material and as an investment asset traded on global markets.

Beyond that, silver is a key industrial metal. It's essential in electronics, solar panels, batteries, and medical equipment due to its excellent electrical and antibacterial properties. This blend of practical use and lasting value makes silver unique among precious metals — bridging industry and investment.

Today, it's traded in its pure form as a metal and there are various investment instruments linked to it: silver futures, ETFs, and mining stocks. They all allow to get exposure to silver without having to buy metal itself.