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$93 CRASH FAKEOUT: Silver Back to $88 – The $100 Trap Is Still LIVE! Silver did not crash. It was shaken. After printing a historic high of $93.75, silver plunged nearly 8% in two days, triggering mass liquidations and panic headlines declaring the rally “over.” But within 72 hours, silver rebounded back near $90. As of January 18, it is trading around $90.86. That recovery is the story. This was not a bubble bursting. It was a classic margin-engineered flush designed to force weak hands out of leveraged paper positions. The CME raised silver margins by 47%, triggering forced selling across futures markets worldwide. Traders who were right on fundamentals but undercapitalized were liquidated at the lows. The result? Paper price collapsed briefly. Physical demand did not. Despite the so-called crash, silver still closed the week up roughly 13%. Physical premiums barely moved. Retail silver continues to trade far above COMEX spot, with Eagles near $115–120 and institutional bars well above futures pricing. That divergence proves the selloff was paper-driven, not demand-driven. This exact playbook was used in 1980 and 2011: margin hikes, forced liquidation, media narratives of “bubble burst,” and psychological damage to keep participants sidelined. The difference in 2026 is critical: This rally is not speculative. It is shortage-driven. COMEX registered silver inventories are down roughly 70% over five years. The market has run cumulative deficits approaching 900 million ounces since 2021. China controls most global refining and has restricted exports. Industrial demand from solar, EVs, AI data centers, and defense applications is inelastic. You can flush traders. You cannot flush industrial demand. That’s why silver dropped from $93 to $86 and immediately bounced. The speculators left. The buyers didn’t. This is why $88–90 now looks like a floor, not a top. And why the psychological “$100 trap” remains active. Most participants won’t believe silver can hold above $100 until it already does, forcing them to chase higher. The real tell isn’t price volatility. It’s physical premiums, inventory drawdowns, delivery pressure, and continued Fed liquidity injections to stabilize short-exposed banks. The market is no longer debating whether silver is strong. It’s deciding how fast it reprices. Watch the $86 support. Watch $92 resistance. Watch COMEX deliveries. Watch Fed repo activity. These signals will determine whether silver consolidates briefly or accelerates into triple digits. This move isn’t over. The fakeout already happened. This content is for informational and analytical discussion only and does not constitute financial or investment advice.