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iShares Silver Trust (NYSEARCA:SLV | SLV Price Prediction) has been one of 2026’s standout commodity stories, with the silver ETF rising roughly 129% over the past year and about 8% year to date. After touching nearly $70 this week, SLV gave back roughly 3% intraday as Treasury yields pushed toward 52-week highs. With silver at decade-plus valuations, the question for SLV holders is what could end the rally and what could extend it.
The fund and where it sits today
SLV is a grantor trust holding physical silver bullion in vaults, charging an expense ratio of 0.20%. Shares track the spot price of silver less fees, with no portfolio manager and no income stream. Investors get clean exposure to one thing: the silver price. That simplicity is the appeal, and it is why SLV’s fate hinges on factors outside the fund itself.
The recent run has been powerful but uneven. SLV is up roughly 4% in the past week yet only about 1% over the past month, suggesting consolidation rather than acceleration. The five-year return sits at around 170%, and the ten-year at roughly 353%.
The macro factor that matters most: real yields
Silver pays no coupon or dividend, so its biggest competitor is the 10-year Treasury. That yield now stands at 4.56%, in the 98th percentile of its trailing 12-month range, after touching 4.67% on May 19. The yield is up about 26 basis points over the past month and 37 basis points since year-end 2025.
Watch for a sustained move above 4.70% on the 10-year. That would mark a clean breakout from the trailing range and historically coincides with sharp drawdowns in precious metals as the opportunity cost of holding bullion widens. Check the Federal Reserve’s FRED DGS10 series weekly, and on every Fed meeting and CPI release. The countervailing force, and the reason SLV has held up, is oil. WTI crude has rallied to $112.25 per barrel, up roughly 31% in a month. If that feeds into CPI prints, real yields fall even as nominal yields rise, and silver wins.
The fund-specific factor: industrial demand drives the trade
This is where SLV diverges from a gold ETF. Roughly half of annual silver consumption comes from industrial uses, primarily solar photovoltaic cells, electric vehicle wiring, and electronics. That mix makes SLV part precious metal, part industrial commodity, and the industrial half is the swing factor in 2026.
Watch the Silver Institute’s quarterly World Silver Survey updates and monthly solar module shipment data from BloombergNEF and the China Photovoltaic Industry Association. A slowdown in Chinese solar installations or a technology shift toward thinner silver-paste cells would erode the demand pillar driving the past year’s gains. The VIX at 17.01, well off the 31.05 peak hit on March 27, tells you industrial demand is doing the heavy lifting here.
Investors who want gold’s monetary qualities without industrial cyclicality should look at SPDR Gold Shares (NYSEARCA:GLD) instead. SLV is the right vehicle if you believe the electrification buildout continues and inflation stays sticky enough to cap real yields.
What to watch from here
If the 10-year Treasury yield breaks and holds above 4.70%, SLV’s inflation-hedging tailwind weakens quickly. If global solar installation data weakens in the next Silver Institute update, the industrial demand story cracks. As Brian Kelly put it on a recent Mad Money segment, “as interest rates go up it’s going to weigh a little bit on precious metals but eventually the inflation narrative should pick up and that’ll be good for silver.” That is the trade SLV represents right now, and those are the two signals that will tell you when it stops working.
