The rebound reflects a combination of institutional buying, safe-haven demand, and structural industrial support. Traders monitoring the 4-hour and daily charts are observing higher lows near key support levels, suggesting short-term consolidation and potential continuation.
On the 4-hour chart, silver held the $71.21 support zone for three consecutive sessions, accompanied by increasing accumulation volume and improving Relative Strength Index (RSI) momentum. These are classic confirmation signals of a Wyckoff Model 2 spring, indicating institutional participation ahead of a potential markup phase.
Silver was traded cleanly through a planned Wyckoff Model 2 accumulation, with scaled entries and a timely exit as distribution signals appeared. Source: CJ via X
Historically, Wyckoff accumulation patterns signal low-risk entry zones for informed traders, combining support retests with controlled volume spikes. CJ (@Sol_CJ888) highlighted a trade near $30.50, scaled across two entries, and exited around $32 with a 2.5:1 risk-reward ratio, illustrating the practical application of this methodology.
Volume analysis also shows institutional ETF flows increasing modestly over the past week. According to CFTC Commitment of Traders (COT) data, net long positions in silver futures have risen 3% week-over-week, supporting the view of accumulation rather than retail speculation.
Silver is trading within a well-defined ascending corrective channel on the daily chart. Higher lows formed above $71.21, while the $100–$102 zone aligns with prior 0.618 Fibonacci retracement levels, representing a historically significant supply area where institutional sellers previously defended positions.
Silver is rebounding within a corrective channel but remains capped below key resistance, signaling no confirmed bullish trend. Source: Jaddenn onTradingView
Historical rallies in silver have often stalled near the $101 level due to concentrated institutional supply, making this zone a key short-term test for both bullish and bearish participants, particularly as industrial demand continues to expand.
Short-term market sentiment is influenced by geopolitical developments. The US Navy’s interception of an Iranian drone in the Arabian Sea caused a temporary spike in safe-haven demand, particularly for precious metals.
Silver rebounded over 5% on February 4, 2026, supported by institutional buying, safe-haven demand, and solar-sector strength, with upside holding above $79. Source: EvarMayi on TradingView
While the geopolitical catalyst is likely transient, silver’s response illustrates its dual role as a safe-haven asset and industrial commodity. Analysts at World Silver Survey 2026 note that safe-haven demand typically accounts for 10–15% of total silver traded during periods of heightened geopolitical tension.
Silver’s long-term outlook is increasingly anchored by structural industrial demand rather than speculative flows alone. Key drivers include:
This industrial backbone differentiates silver from purely speculative assets and adds resilience to price movements. Combined with ETF flows—iShares Silver Trust (SLV) holdings up 2% month-over-month—these structural drivers support medium-term stability and moderate upside potential.
Despite the rebound, silver remains under pressure relative to gold, with elevated real yields and slowing global growth weighing on speculative positioning. Recent selloffs erased prior demand zones, concentrating liquidity at lower levels. Key downside magnets include $70.30, $64.40, and $60.60 if risk sentiment deteriorates.
Confirmation guidance for traders:
Silver remains in an impulsive markdown, with weak consolidation near $75–$77 and selling pressure expected around the $84–$87 supply zone unless price reclaims $87. Source: BlackGoldMarket on TradingView
By combining technical indicators, volume analysis, institutional positioning, and industrial demand, this framework offers a structured, evidence-based approach to silver price forecasting rather than relying on anecdotal commentary.


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