Should you buy the iShares Silver ETF after the 28% correction? History says that this may happen next.


Silver is a precious metal, so it falls into the same category as gold, except that it is widely used in industrial applications while its bright yellow counterpart is not. In fact, the annual supply of silver is replenished by electronics, alloys, dealers and other manufacturers.

The price of an ounce of silver rose 144% in 2025, partly because China announced new export restrictions that raised fears of supply disruptions. The metal gained more ground in the early stages of 2026, but that is actually 28% lower than last year’s high of $121 an ounce.

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of the iShares Silver Trust (NYSEMKT:SLV) An exchange traded fund (ETF) that directly tracks the price of silver. It can be bought through any major stock trading platform, so it is a popular alternative to buying physical silver, which has storage and insurance costs.

Should Investors Buy ETFs After Silver’s Recent Correction? Here’s what history says it can do next.

Silver bull and bear figurines on blue background.
Image source: Getty Images.

Investors typically buy precious metals during times of heightened political and economic uncertainty, as they are proven stores of value dating back thousands of years. Gold is the first choice because of its scarcity, only 219,890 tons of the yellow metal have been mined from the earth throughout human history. Gold is abundant with around 1.7 million tonnes mined so far.

Precious metals do not generate any revenue or income, so they do not grow in value organically. Instead, their perceived value rises as fiat currencies depreciate. The U.S. dollar, for example, has lost about 90% of its purchasing power since 1971, the year the country left the gold standard—a mechanism that prevented the government from printing more money without an equivalent amount of physical gold.

Ironically, over the past five decades, the government has been able to print more dollars at its discretion, expanding the money supply. The chart below shows the relationship between an increasing money supply, the declining purchasing power of the US dollar, and rising gold in dollar terms:

Gold price in US dollar chart
Gold price in US dollar data by YCharts

Political unrest and economic uncertainty are currently rife, with the Trump administration imposing tariffs on many of America’s trading partners, as well as running a significant fiscal deficit that pushed the national debt to $38.5 trillion last year. Investors fear that the only way the government can continue this fiscal policy is to devalue the US dollar by further increasing the money supply.

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