India’s Silver Crisis: How Diwali Demand Broke the Global Market

In a stunning first-time event, India’s largest precious metals refinery, MMTC-Pamp, ran completely out of silver stock last week—something that hasn’t happened in its entire history. And this isn’t just an Indian problem anymore. Within days, the shortage rippled across London, New York, and global trading floors, triggering what experts are calling the biggest silver crisis since 1980.

The Numbers Behind the Chaos

The cost of borrowing silver overnight soared to annualized rates as high as 200%, while spot silver prices hit $52.58 per ounce in London, breaking the 1980 record. Indian silver now trades at a staggering 10% premium over global prices—unprecedented in modern market history.

India’s Silver Market Snapshot

Metric2025 DataContext
Import Decline-42% (3,302 tonnes)Jan-Aug 2025 vs 2024
ETF Inflows (Sept)₹53,420 croreRecord monthly inflow
Indian PremiumUp to 10%Over global spot prices
London Lease Rates30%+Cost to borrow physical silver
Global Deficit700M ouncesCumulative since 2021

Source: Indian Customs Data, Silver Institute, Bloomberg

India's Silver Crisis: How Diwali Demand Broke the Global Market

The Perfect Storm: What Actually Happened?

A perfect storm of events coincided to drain the silver market’s buffer—including a multi-year solar power boom, a rush to ship metal to the US to beat possible tariffs, a wave of investment in precious metals as part of the “debasement trade,” and a sudden spike in demand from India.

Here’s the killer detail: Social media influencers hyped silver’s “100-to-1” ratio to gold as a once-in-a-generation opportunity, triggering a buying frenzy during Diwali that literally emptied vaults across the country.

JPMorgan Says “Sorry, We’re Out”

JPMorgan Chase & Co., the largest precious metals trader, told at least one client it had no more silver available to deliver to India for October, with the earliest availability in November. When the world’s biggest bullion supplier runs dry, you know something fundamental has broken.

Vipin Raina, head of trading at MMTC-Pamp, captured the moment perfectly: “This kind of crazy market—where people are buying at these levels—I have not seen in my 27-year career”.

Why India Couldn’t Just Import More

You’d think the massive premium would trigger an import flood, right? Wrong. Tight global supplies, logistical bottlenecks, and elevated lease rates exceeding 30% in London made it increasingly difficult to source the metal.

Most of London’s $36 billion in silver holdings was locked up in exchange-traded funds, with ETFs absorbing over 100 million ounces since early 2025—leaving virtually nothing for physical buyers desperate to fulfill orders.

India's Silver Crisis: How Diwali Demand Broke the Global Market

The Industrial Demand Nobody Saw Coming

Beyond investment mania, there’s a structural shortage brewing. Silver is not merely a precious metal but an industrial metal—EVs, solar panels, 5G equipment, and semiconductors all depend on it, with electric cars alone consuming about 50 grams of silver each.

And here’s the kicker: About 70% of silver is a by-product of mining other metals, limiting how quickly output can respond to price increases. You can’t just “mine more silver” when prices spike.

India’s Economic Strength on Full Display

So when people say “Indian economy is dead,” show them this: India just bought so much silver it broke the entire global market. That’s not weakness—that’s millions of Indians demonstrating purchasing power that literally drained international reserves.

For Indian investors tracking precious metals trends, this crisis reveals both the nation’s economic muscle and cultural buying power on the world stage.

What Happens Next?

Unlike past crises, this stems from genuine shortages, not market manipulation, with the Silver Institute reporting the world has run a cumulative supply deficit of nearly 700 million ounces since 2021.

Several silver ETFs have temporarily halted new subscriptions to prevent investors from overpaying. Global refineries are working overtime, but with China’s week-long holiday cutting off another major supply source, relief won’t come quickly.

For detailed market analysis, check the Silver Institute’s official supply-demand reports and the London Bullion Market Association’s market updates.

Bottom Line: India didn’t just celebrate Diwali in 2025—it demonstrated economic firepower that literally reshaped global commodity markets. The silver shortage isn’t a crisis for India; it’s proof of unstoppable consumer demand meeting limited global supply.

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