Monday, April 20, 2026 - Gold prices are drawing attention due to recent geopolitical tensions boosting demand for safe-haven assets, while fluctuations in the U.S. dollar exchange rate impact its valuation. Investors are also focused on central bank policy shifts, specifically interest rate decisions, which could influence gold's trajectory by affecting economic growth outlooks and inflation concerns worldwide.
The silver price is set in the global commodities market in US Dollars per troy ounce; this page shows the equivalent price in Euros. One troy ounce equals 31.10348 grams. Silver is quoted under the international symbol XAG.
One of the most widely watched indicators in precious metals markets is the gold-to-silver ratio — the number of troy ounces of silver required to buy one troy ounce of gold. Investors use it as a rough gauge of relative value between the two metals.
Historically, the ratio has ranged from as low as about 15:1 in antiquity and through the 19th century (when silver was formally monetized) to over 100:1 in modern crises. A high ratio is often interpreted as silver being cheap relative to gold, while a low ratio suggests the opposite. Since the end of silver-backed currencies, the long-run average has drifted higher, reflecting silver's shift from a monetary metal to a hybrid monetary-industrial asset.
Silver's price is shaped by a unique mix of monetary and industrial forces:
Not all silver is the same purity. Common grades include:
When you buy or sell an item, its intrinsic metal value is the spot price multiplied by its weight and its purity (for example, 100 grams of sterling = 92.5 grams of pure silver).
The price shown on this page is the mid-market spot price — the international reference rate at which silver trades in wholesale markets, converted to Euros. It is not the price you will pay retail.
Investors can gain exposure to silver in several ways, each with different costs and risk profiles:
Silver has been mined and valued by humans for at least 5,000 years. The earliest known silver mining operations date to around 3,000 BC in Anatolia (modern Turkey). By 1,200 BC, the silver mines of Laurion near Athens were among the largest in the ancient world, helping finance the Athenian navy at the Battle of Salamis and the broader Greek classical age.
In the Roman Empire, the silver denarius was the backbone of the monetary system for more than 400 years. Its gradual debasement — as successive emperors reduced its silver content to stretch government finances — is one of the earliest well-documented cases of monetary inflation.
The discovery of vast silver deposits in the Americas after 1492 reshaped the global economy. Spanish mines at Potosí (in present-day Bolivia) and Zacatecas (in Mexico) produced enormous quantities of silver, much of which flowed to Ming and Qing China in exchange for silk, porcelain, and tea. The Spanish silver dollar became the world's first truly global currency, circulating from Europe to the Americas to East Asia.
In the United States, the Coinage Act of 1792 defined the US dollar in terms of silver — 371.25 grains (about 24.1 grams) of pure silver per dollar. Silver remained a legal monetary metal in the US until the demonetization of 1873 (sometimes called the "Crime of '73" by silver advocates), which moved the country toward a de facto gold standard. Circulating US silver coins continued until 1964, after which rising silver prices made it uneconomic to mint them in 90% silver.
In 1980, a speculative squeeze led by the Hunt brothers of Texas drove the silver price above $49 per ounce before collapsing in a matter of days. The metal then spent much of the 1990s in a long bear market, trading below $10 per ounce for years. Silver rallied sharply during the 2008–2011 global financial crisis, reaching nearly $50 in 2011 amid broad commodity and precious metals strength.
In recent years silver has attracted renewed interest both as an inflation hedge and as a critical input to the energy transition, particularly photovoltaic solar panels. Industrial demand and investor demand often pull in different directions, which can make silver more volatile than gold.
Sources:
"Silver," https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silver
"Silver as an investment," https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silver_as_an_investment
"The Silver Institute — World Silver Survey," https://www.silverinstitute.org/