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$XAUT The Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME) announced its second margin increase for silver futures within two weeks. The new regulation will take effect on December 29 (Monday), marking a critical week for the silver market.
The exchange has raised the initial margin requirement for March 2026 silver futures contracts from $20,000 at the beginning of this month to approximately $25,000. Currently, silver prices hover near historic highs, and this adjustment further increases pressure on leveraged traders.
CME Intervention Sparks Fears of a Repetition of History
This decision has sparked intense market debate: Is the rally in silver overextended, or is it merely entering a phase of oscillation driven by structural supply shortages and global capital flows?
Cryptocurrency investors and macro analyst Qinbafrank warn that CME’s move echoes two iconic peak moments in the silver market—1980 and 2011. In both periods, aggressive margin hikes occurred near the top of historic rallies, triggering forced deleveraging.
In 2011, driven by zero interest rates, quantitative easing, and the European debt crisis, silver prices soared from $8.50/oz to $50/oz.
At the peak, CME increased margins five times within nine days, forcing leveraged funds to exit the futures market, causing silver prices to plummet nearly 30% over a few weeks.
The 1980 event was even more severe. The Hunt brothers accumulated over 200 million ounces of silver, pushing prices close to $50/oz through leveraged futures trading.
CME’s “Silver Rule 7” effectively eliminated leveraged trading. Coupled with then-Fed Chairman Paul Volcker’s rate hikes, it completely ended the silver rally, leading to the Hunt brothers’ bankruptcy.