The Ninepoint Silver Bullion Fund returned +50.8% (Series F CAD) in Q4 2025 bringing annual performance to +132.9% (Series F CAD) versus Silver Spot CAD returning +51.5% in Q4 and +136.8% year-to-date.
NINEPOINT SILVER BULLION FUND - COMPOUNDED RETURNS¹ (%) AS OF DECEMBER 31, 2025 (SERIES F NPP326) | INCEPTION DATE: MAY 10, 2011
1M |
YTD |
3M |
6M |
1YR |
3YR |
5YR |
10YR |
INCEPTION |
|
FUND |
24.3% |
132.9% |
50.8% |
98.2% |
132.9% |
42.7% |
22.3% |
15.8% |
5.0% |
INDEX |
24.6% |
136.8% |
51.5% |
100.0% |
136.8% |
44.7% |
24.0% |
17.8% |
7.0% |
Silver capped a landmark 2025 with an extraordinary Q4, surging from $47.32 on October 1 to a quarter-end close of $77.92. With a 65% quarterly gain: the metal shattered its 1980 record of $49.95 in early October, peaked at $80 in mid-December, and settled near its highs after a brief reversal.
Ultimately, silver’s 166% year-to-date rally is the strongest the metal has experienced in decades, outperforming gold’s 66% annual rise.
This parabolic move was driven by a combination of supply constraints and robust physical and investor demand, though it culminated in heightened volatility, including a 16% intraday drop on December 29 amid profit-taking and margin adjustments.
Key Drivers in Q4
Silver’s rally in the final quarter of 2025 was driven by a "perfect storm" of structural supply deficits and aggressive institutional accumulation. While global supply deficits persisted for a fifth year (projected at 95 million ounces by the Silver Institute), the price action was specifically catalyzed by three pillars: industrial demand, a resurgence in ETF flows and central bank positioning.
Industrial Demand
Silver is uniquely caught between the Green Transition and the AI Revolution. Unlike gold, which is primarily a monetary asset, silver’s conductivity makes it irreplaceable in modern infrastructure with key demand drivers including:
- Photovoltaic (Solar) Efficiency: New N-type solar cells require significantly more silver paste per watt than older models. Even as engineers try to "thrift" (use less) silver, the sheer volume of global solar installations is outstripping those savings.
- The AI Connection: AI data centers require massive power distribution upgrades and high-speed connectors. Silver’s thermal and electrical conductivity is unmatched, making it the "hidden" mineral play of the Silicon Valley boom.
- EV Infrastructure: Beyond the cars themselves, the charging grid and onboard power electronics are consuming silver at a rate 30% higher than traditional internal combustion vehicles.
ETF Flows¹
In Q4, Exchange-Traded Funds (ETFs) shifted from being passive tracking tools to being the primary competitors for physical bullion.
- Inflow Parabola: Global silver ETFs absorbed a record 187 million ounces in 2025, with a massive concentration in Q4. By year-end, total holdings reached 1.13 billion ounces, valued at over $80 billion, equivalent to roughly 15 months of global mine production.
- The Squeeze Mechanic: Unlike "paper" futures, physically backed ETFs must acquire metal to back new shares. In Q4, this demand hit just as LBMA (London) vaults dropped to their lowest levels in a decade (<18,500 tonnes), creating a scenario where ETFs now hold more silver than the total available "free float" in official exchange vaults.
- Institutional Appetite: Silver ETFs delivered returns of ~52–66% in Q4 alone, outperforming gold (17%) and the S&P 500. This triggered "momentum" buying from generalist funds that traditionally ignored the metal.
Central Bank Positioning²
In 2026, the silver market has been reshaped by a shift in Central Bank Positioning, transitioning the metal from a purely industrial/retail asset to a strategic sovereign reserve. This "monetary return" is led by three key players:
- Russia: Leading the charge with "explicit policy," Russia’s 2025–2027 federal budget specifically allocated roughly $535 million (51.5 billion rubles) for precious metals, including silver for the first time. As the world's eighth-largest producer, Russia is reportedly bypassing global exchanges to stack its own mine supply (approx. 38.5M oz/year) directly into state vaults, further tightening global physical availability.
- Saudi Arabia: In a landmark move, the Saudi Central Bank (SAMA) shifted from "quiet experimentation" to active accumulation in late 2025. Unlike Russia's physical focus, the Kingdom utilized high-liquidity tools like the iShares Silver Trust (SLV) and silver-miner ETFs to build rapid positions, signaling a broader BRICS-aligned effort to diversify reserves away from the US Dollar.
- India: While the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) remains gold-focused, the government has "institutionalized" domestic silver demand by slashing import duties to 6% and incentivizing silver ETFs. This policy shift turned the 2025 Diwali season into a significant demand driver, with imports nearly doubling as silver became a mainstream alternative for both citizens and domestic funds.
Market Dynamics and Risks
Q4 Underscored Silver’s Dual Identity - industrial utility established a firm price floor, while monetary demand fueled volatility. Notably, open interest declined even as prices doubled, signaling a structural shift from paper speculation toward physical delivery. While silver saw a late-December correction from $84.00 to $70.52, momentum continued to be positive in early 2026.
Outlook for 2026
Silver’s unique position as an industrial metal, critical mineral and monetary asset combined with a tight physical market, has resulted in significant price appreciation in 2025. We expect similar market dynamics in 2026.
Silver supply remains structurally constrained and unable to meet rising demand, as roughly 80%3 of production is a by-product of base metal mining (copper, lead, and zinc), preventing miners from quickly increasing output. This inelasticity, combined with declining ore grades and a lack of new primary mine commissions, has pushed the market into its sixth consecutive year of structural deficits. Furthermore, geopolitical shifts—such as China’s export licensing requirements and Russia diverting its domestic supply into state vaults—have drained global inventories to decade lows, leaving the physical market exceptionally tight.
Sincerely,
Ninepoint Partners
1. Silver Institute, Sprott, NASDAQ, Bloomberg
2. Kitco, The Economic Times (India)
3. Silver Institute
All figures in USD unless stated otherwise.