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ALERT: Silver $91 Stalls While Geneva Clock Runs Out — $95 Target or Trap? Silver is sitting around 86 dollars and looks flat on the daily chart, but underneath that “calm” you have a structurally tight market, a record Shanghai premium, and COMEX vaults at multi‑year lows — all of it about to collide with a Geneva headline in a matter of hours. In this video, I break down why the Geneva talks are just the trigger on top of a pre‑loaded spring: Structural tension before Geneva: silver is still down almost 30% from its late‑January all‑time high, but COMEX registered stocks have collapsed from about 167 million ounces in October to roughly 88 million today, while total COMEX inventory is off more than 30% and March open interest represents multiple paper claims per deliverable ounce heading into first‑notice day. Two‑tier pricing: Shanghai continues to trade physical silver at double‑digit premiums, with recent data showing futures and spot running roughly 20–26 dollars above Western prices — a structural fracture that arbitrage cannot close cleanly because of Chinese export controls and frictions, and that has persisted even as New York paper sold off. Geneva as catalyst, not cause: I lay out the nuclear‑talks structure — US demands for permanent dismantlement versus Iran’s limited‑term freeze, Oman’s shuttle mediation, new US sanctions, and Iran’s February Strait of Hormuz closure drill — and map two realistic scenarios (framework vs breakdown), including what a “deal” or a failure likely means in near‑term price terms (rough ranges down into the low‑80s or up toward mid‑90s and beyond). Why the risk is asymmetric: with a sixth consecutive annual deficit of around 67 million ounces, cumulative shortfalls above 800 million ounces, and the Silver Institute itself saying 2026 will again rely on above‑ground inventory drawdowns, the downside from a diplomatic de‑escalation is capped by tight physical and thin COMEX registered, while an escalation that turns the Hormuz signal into action can stack a war premium on top of an already constrained market. What to watch in real time: I walk you through how to follow tonight’s moves for free — from Omani mediator statements and XAG/USD levels relative to key technical lines, to tomorrow’s COMEX registered update on March first‑notice, Shanghai’s opening premium, and oil’s reaction around the Strait — so you’re watching the plumbing and the structure, not just whatever headline hits your feed first. ⚠️ DISCLAIMER (for your description) This content is for educational and entertainment purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or trading advice. Silver, gold, futures, and related instruments are volatile and can result in significant losses. Always do your own research and consult a licensed financial professional before making any investment decisions.