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Silver’s $74.54 Floor: A Market Caught Between a Deficit and a Hawkish Fed

Silver is trading at $74.54 per ounce, down roughly 4% from the previous session, as two powerful forces pull the market in opposite directions. A structural supply deficit is building a floor under prices, while a hawkish Federal Reserve nominee and escalating tensions in the Persian Gulf are piling on the pressure from above.

The Warsh Factor and a Blocked Confirmation

Kevin Warsh, the nominee to chair the Federal Reserve, has injected a fresh dose of uncertainty into the precious metals complex. Testifying before the Senate Banking Committee, Warsh declared the Fed had lost its credibility and called for a “regime change” — one that prioritizes aggressive inflation fighting and reduces reliance on bond purchases and forward guidance.

For non-yielding assets like silver, that hawkish rhetoric translates directly into headwinds. Markets are now pricing in no rate cuts through 2026, a sharp reversal from earlier expectations of at least two.

But Warsh’s path to confirmation is far from clear. Republican Senator Thom Tillis has announced he will block the vote, demanding the Justice Department drop its investigation into Jerome Powell. Without Tillis, Republicans lack the necessary majority, and all Democrats are expected to vote against.

Hormuz: A Geopolitical Wildfire

The blockade of the Strait of Hormuz is adding another layer of complexity. Tehran continues to severely restrict international shipping, and reports this week indicate Iranian forces fired on commercial vessels. The US has responded by blocking Iranian ports.

The resulting surge in oil prices is anchoring inflation expectations higher, which in turn pushes up the dollar and bond yields — a toxic combination for silver. Since the standoff began, the metal has lost more than 15% of its value and now sits below the $78 mark.

Plans for a second round of peace talks have collapsed, leaving the market with no clear off-ramp from the geopolitical turmoil.

The Deficit That Won’t Quit

Despite the macro headwinds, the physical market tells a very different story. The Silver Institute projects a sixth consecutive annual supply deficit in 2026, with the gap reaching 67 million ounces. From 2021 through 2026, the cumulative shortfall is expected to total roughly 820 million ounces.

Global mine production is edging up to its highest level in a decade, but that marginal increase is nowhere near enough to meet demand. Industry is being forced to draw down above-ground inventories.

On the demand side, the picture is shifting. The solar industry is using less silver per panel thanks to efficiency gains, but that is being offset by growth in data centers, artificial intelligence infrastructure, and automotive electronics. Physical investment is expected to jump by a fifth to a three-year high, as Western investors seek refuge in the metal amid macroeconomic uncertainty.

Jewelry and silverware, however, are feeling the pinch from high prices, with analysts forecasting a double-digit decline in demand.

A Rally Partially Erased

Silver had staged a remarkable recovery from its low around March 23, surging 31% to nearly $80 per ounce — outperforming gold. But the current correction is eating into those gains.

The gold-silver ratio has climbed to 63.03, up from 60.99 on Wednesday, signaling that gold is holding up better. Year-to-date, silver is still up roughly 5%.

Analyst Targets: Optimism Below the Surface

Major banks remain constructive on silver’s medium-term outlook, despite the current weakness. A robust gold price and tight physical liquidity in London are seen as limiting downside risks.

  • J.P. Morgan forecasts an average price of $81 per ounce for 2026.
  • Commerzbank expects a rise to $90 by the end of 2026, with further potential to $95 by the end of 2027.

What’s Next

In the near term, the direction of silver hinges on US PMI data and initial jobless claims — unless the Persian Gulf delivers another escalation. The structural deficit provides a floor, but until the Fed’s path becomes clearer and geopolitical tensions ease, silver’s rally will remain a fragile one.

Solana’s Regulatory Clarity and Record RWA Volumes Can’t Stop the Slide

The blockchain is firing on all cylinders operationally — yet its native token remains stuck in a technical rut. Solana has secured a landmark regulatory classification from US authorities, seen tokenized real-world asset volumes surge past $1.82 billion, and attracted over $1 billion into spot ETFs. The price, however, tells a different story: SOL trades at roughly $85.50, down more than 32% since the start of the year and miles from its 52-week peak of $247.56.

A Commodity in the Eyes of the SEC

A joint statement from the SEC and CFTC in mid-March finally settled a long-running question for institutional investors. Solana is now officially classified as a digital commodity, placing it on the same legal footing as Bitcoin and Ethereum. The designation removes a significant compliance hurdle for asset managers, and explicitly permits custodian staking services under specific conditions.

The impact is already visible in the ETF space. Cumulative inflows into the six spot-SOL funds, approved in October 2025, have crossed the billion-dollar threshold. Goldman Sachs alone disclosed positions worth $108 million spread across products from Bitwise and Grayscale. Last week, five consecutive trading sessions brought in $35 million — a pattern market observers compare to the early adoption phase of Bitcoin and Ethereum ETFs.

Real-World Assets Hit New Highs

The tokenized real-world asset volume on Solana reached an all-time high of $1.82 billion in March 2026. To put that in perspective: the network needed the entire year of 2025 to climb from roughly $200 million to $873 million. The next $787 million arrived in just six weeks.

Driving this growth are network stability, an active wallet base of 80 to 100 million users, and roughly $17 billion in stablecoins already operating on the blockchain. Solana now ranks as the third-largest blockchain for tokenized assets with a 4.57% global market share. Ethereum still holds more than seven times that value, but the gap is narrowing.

The ecosystem’s composition is shifting. Historically, stablecoin-adjacent platforms accounted for about 91% of the captured value. The entry of Ondo Finance’s tokenized equities and Treasuries is broadening the base into new asset classes. Ondo is also providing $200 million in pre-financing for State Street’s planned tokenized liquidity fund SWEEP on Solana, developed in partnership with Galaxy Digital. That fund will use PayPal’s PYUSD for on-chain operations, targeting institutional liquidity management.

Wall Street Goes On-Chain

Traditional finance is moving beyond ETFs. SoFi, the US bank, is using the Solana network for its new corporate client platform, enabling round-the-clock payments in dollars and stablecoins. Partners including Mastercard and BitGo are planning to adopt the system for faster transactions.

On the balance sheet side, Nasdaq-listed DeFi Development Corp. is strategically expanding its Solana reserves, now holding over 2.2 million tokens. The company announced an expansion into Asia this week, planning to acquire a stake in Japan’s Allied Architects to roll out its crypto strategy internationally.

The Technical Picture Remains Strained

For all the institutional progress, the chart is unforgiving. The relative strength index sits at nearly 32, technically in oversold territory. The 50-day moving average, hovering around $86, has rejected every daily close in recent sessions. SOL is trading tightly around that level, unable to break higher.

The operational numbers stand in stark contrast. Solana applications generated $292 million in revenue during the first quarter of 2026, led by Pumpfun with $123 million. DEX spot volume hit $284.5 billion, giving Solana a 41% market share — more than Ethereum and all its layer-2 networks combined. According to Standard Chartered, Solana stablecoins rotate about six times more frequently per dollar than those on Ethereum.

The Alpenglow Catalyst

Developers are preparing the largest core upgrade in the project’s history. The Alpenglow integration, targeting a mainnet launch by the end of 2026 after security testing in the fourth quarter, aims to slash transaction finalization from 12.8 seconds to under 150 milliseconds. The Firedancer validator client is already running on more than 20% of active validators, providing technical tailwinds.

Whether this infrastructure overhaul can close the gap between Solana’s operational strength and its token’s market performance remains the open question. The regulatory clarity and institutional adoption provide the foundation — but the price action suggests the market is waiting for a broader crypto catalyst to turn the tide.

Bitcoin’s Two-Front Advance: Washington Meets Wall Street in a Historic Convergence

The largest cryptocurrency is staging a breakout on twin engines—institutional accumulation and a regulatory pivot that could redefine the entire asset class. Bitcoin has climbed to roughly $77,639, shaking off the fear that has gripped the broader market, as the Fear & Greed Index remains stuck at 21. Yet beneath the surface anxiety, a structural transformation is underway.

The Supply Crunch That Keeps Building

The most compelling force in Bitcoin’s current rally is invisible to the casual observer. Over the past 30 days, the largest wallets have accumulated roughly 270,000 BTC—the most aggressive monthly buying spree since 2013. Simultaneously, exchange reserves have plunged to a seven-year low. When coins leave trading platforms, they effectively exit the available supply, creating a tightening vise for any future buyers.

The derivatives market is adding its own tension. Funding rates on perpetual swaps are hovering near three-year lows, even as open interest continues to climb. The setup is textbook: short sellers are piling on with increasing leverage, and deeply negative funding rates raise both the probability and the potential force of a short squeeze.

Deutsche Börse’s announced $200 million stake in Kraken provided another institutional stamp of approval, bridging traditional finance and digital assets in a concrete way.

A Political Earthquake in Las Vegas

While the supply dynamics are powerful, the political calendar may prove equally decisive. For the first time in history, the chairs of both the SEC and the CFTC—Paul Atkins and Mike Selig—will appear together on stage at the Bitcoin 2026 conference in Las Vegas, starting April 27. The event comes as the US Congress races toward a vote on the Clarity Act, legislation that would hand the CFTC exclusive oversight of crypto spot markets, effectively removing Bitcoin and Ethereum from the SEC’s jurisdiction.

A committee vote is expected in May, with a final decision possible by July. The conference will also feature lawmakers and industry leaders debating a national crypto strategy, adding real-time political drama to the market’s technical setup.

The ETF Comeback

The political momentum is mirrored in the ETF flows. US spot Bitcoin ETFs have recorded five consecutive days of net inflows through April 22, pushing total assets under management across all eleven products past $96.5 billion. BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust continues to capture the largest share. For the ETF issuers, April marks the first positive month of 2026 after four straight months of outflows.

Bitcoin has risen roughly 10% over the past 30 days, recovering sharply from its February low. The $80,000 level now looms as the next psychological hurdle.

A Government Buyer on the Horizon

Perhaps the most radical development is coming from the White House. The US administration is reportedly planning to establish a strategic Bitcoin reserve, codifying the government’s holding of the cryptocurrency into law—similar to national gold reserves. White House adviser Patrick Witt has promised concrete announcements within the next two months. If the plan materializes, the United States would enter the Bitcoin market as a sovereign buyer, an unprecedented development that could fundamentally alter the supply-demand equation.

The Altcoin Reality Check

The bullish narrative for Bitcoin stands in stark contrast to the rest of the market. The FOMC meeting on April 28-29 looms as a macro catalyst that could shift trader positioning across all assets. Meanwhile, altcoins continue to bleed.

Avalanche has fallen 1.6% to $9.24, unable to break through resistance between $9.80 and $10.00. The token’s burn rate has collapsed more than 23% in 24 hours, from 811 to 621 AVAX from gas fees, weakening the deflationary mechanism that was supposed to support the price. The $292 million exploit at Kelp DAO has triggered a broad security panic across DeFi, with Avalanche’s total value locked dropping 6.61%. Despite more than 475,000 AVAX tokens worth $4.63 million being accumulated via Coinbase transactions and moved to custodial wallets, the token couldn’t hold the $10 level. Follow-through demand simply isn’t there.

On the positive side, Bitwise has launched the first US AVAX ETF with integrated staking on the NYSE, offering a 5.4% annual yield. VanEck and Grayscale have also introduced similar products. But short-term technical and psychological selling forces are overwhelming these structural developments.

The micro-cap token 4ART has lost 3.3%, illustrating the liquidity crisis facing niche assets. Its most active trading pair, 4ART/USDT, recorded just $46.62 in volume over 24 hours—a decline of more than 85% from the previous day. With order books that thin, even minimal sell orders can move the price significantly. A token distribution phase planned for 2026 adds potential selling pressure as early allocation holders may reduce positions in anticipation of new supply.

The Divergence That Defines the Market

The current trading session confirms a pattern that has dominated for weeks: Bitcoin absorbs institutional capital while altcoins remain structurally pressured. Ether, XRP, and Solana all closed in the red, with AVAX and 4ART following the same trajectory.

For Avalanche, the $10 mark remains the critical technical test. A sustained breakout could shift sentiment. 4ART will remain a high-risk token without a significant liquidity injection, where price swings in either direction are possible at any moment. Bitcoin holders, meanwhile, are watching the $80,000 level—and the FOMC meeting that could set the stage for the next major move.

Ethereum’s Staking ETF and Record Inflows Signal Institutional Shift

A new financial instrument on the Nasdaq is amplifying Ethereum’s appeal to traditional investors. The actively managed GSR Multi-Asset Staking ETF, trading under the ticker BESO, has begun passing through staking rewards from the Ethereum network directly to shareholders. This launch coincided with a sharp price move that caught many traders off guard, forcing the liquidation of nearly $100 million in short positions within a single day as ETH broke above $2,400.

The institutional appetite for Ethereum exposure is now undeniable. U.S. spot Ethereum ETFs have recorded nine consecutive days of net inflows, a stark reversal from an eight-day outflow streak in March that saw daily outflows as high as $48.5 million. The cumulative net inflow volume for these products has reached $11.94 billion, with total assets under management standing at $13.87 billion. This represents roughly five percent of Ethereum’s entire market capitalization. On Tuesday alone, these funds attracted a net $43 million, with BlackRock’s iShares Ethereum Trust capturing the lion’s share.

This sustained demand is underpinned by robust network fundamentals. In the first quarter of 2026, Ethereum processed over 200.4 million transactions, its most active quarter on record and double the volume seen in 2023. The network added 284,000 new users in Q1, an 82% increase from the previous quarter, driven by Layer-2 solutions, DeFi activity, and record Stablecoin volume of $180 billion.

The structural scarcity created by staking is a key narrative. Approximately 30% of the total ETH supply is now locked in staking, providing a yield while reducing liquid supply. This dynamic is further intensified by corporate accumulation; BitMine Immersion Technologies now holds nearly five million Ether, equivalent to about four percent of the circulating supply, with a significant portion believed to be staked.

Currently trading around $2,372, Ethereum has gained nearly 17% over the past 30 days and sits comfortably above its 50-day moving average. While it remains down almost 21% for the year, the ETH/BTC ratio has recovered to its highest level since January. The Relative Strength Index (RSI) at 52 suggests the asset is neither overbought nor oversold.

Looking ahead, the market faces technical resistance near $2,466, with the more significant 200-day moving average looming around $2,824. The Ethereum ecosystem is also preparing for future catalysts. The Ethereum Foundation has launched a $1 million program to subsidize smart contract audits, covering up to 30% of costs for selected projects. Furthermore, the planned “Glamsterdam” upgrade for mid-2026 promises parallel execution and higher gas limits, aiming to reduce transaction costs and potentially fuel the next leg of growth.

Gold Navigates a Maze of Geopolitics, Deals, and Shifting Demand

The gold market is being pulled in multiple directions. While a tense geopolitical stalemate provides underlying support, shifting demand dynamics and a hawkish monetary policy outlook are capping its momentum. The precious metal traded near $4,750 an ounce on Wednesday, navigating a complex web of news.

A significant structural shift is emerging from Asia. The China gold spread—the premium for physical metal in Shanghai versus European spot prices—has collapsed from $12 to just $1 per ounce within a week. This compression signals that Western capital flows are currently driving prices more forcefully than Chinese physical demand. During the same period, gold gained $65 in Western trading compared to a $54 rise in China.

Nevertheless, China’s foundational role in the market remains intact. The People’s Bank of China added five tonnes to its reserves in March, its 17th consecutive monthly purchase and the largest since February 2025. Chinese gold-backed ETFs have also seen inflows for seven straight months.

Geopolitical tensions in the Middle East continue to underpin the safe-haven asset. The immediate trigger for a sharp price move, however, remains elusive. US President Donald Trump extended a ceasefire with Iran, but Tehran continues to block the Strait of Hormuz and has attacked cargo ships, with reports of three vessels disabled. Iranian negotiator Mohammed Bagher Ghalibaf labels the ongoing US naval patrols a breach of agreement, and direct peace talks are currently off the table according to the Tasnim news agency.

This stalemate has contributed to gold being down roughly ten percent since the conflict began, though it still shows a solid year-to-date gain of over nine percent.

On the monetary policy front, comments from Federal Reserve leadership candidate Kevin Warsh introduced a note of caution. During his Senate hearing, Warsh pledged central bank independence and called for a new framework to tackle persistent inflation, though he provided few specifics. The market’s attention now turns to the next FOMC meeting on April 28-29. The CME Group pegs the probability of an unchanged interest rate at 99.5%, a factor that limits gold’s near-term upside potential.

Amid this backdrop, industry players are making strategic moves. Gold producers and financiers are leveraging the elevated price environment for acquisitions. Gold Candle finalized its acquisition of Fokus Mining Corp. on Wednesday in a deal valuing the Canadian explorer at approximately 65 million Canadian dollars. The transaction centers on the Galloway project in Quebec, which holds an estimated resource of nearly 1.5 million ounces of gold.

In a separate major deal, Wheaton Precious Metals is significantly expanding its portfolio with a $300 million agreement tied to a project with KGL Resources in Australia, plus a multi-million-dollar licensing fee for a venture in British Columbia. Another agreement is nearing completion in Ecuador, where CMOC Group is finalizing details for the Cangrejos gold project. Advance licensing fees are expected to reach $54 million, with $34 million payable immediately upon signing.

Looking ahead, Goldman Sachs maintains its year-end price target of $5,400 an ounce. Analysts cite persistent central bank purchases of around 60 tonnes per month and the expectation for two US interest rate cuts later in the year as key supports. Until then, the pace of Iran negotiations will likely set the short-term rhythm, with any new proposal from Tehran capable of abruptly repricing the market’s risk premium.