Silver futures (SI) closed March 2026 with front-month contracts settling near $75 per ounce on March 31, capping a volatile month marked by a mid-March plunge below $70 amid U.S. dollar strength and risk-off sentiment, followed by a sharp 5% intraday rally driven by persistent supply deficits—projected at 67 million ounces—and surging industrial demand from solar and electronics sectors. Trader consensus on Polymarket reflected this resilience, pricing elevated implied probabilities for upper price targets despite a 20% monthly drawdown, correlated with gold's advance above $4,600. Key watchpoints include April nonfarm payrolls and FOMC minutes, which could influence rate cut expectations and precious metals risk appetite.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · Updated$1,634,014 Vol.
↑ $200
No
↑ $170
No
↑ $150
No
↑ $140
No
↑ $130
No
↑ $125
No
↑ $120
No
↑ $115
No
↑ $110
No
↑ $105
No
↑ $100
No
↑ $95
No
↓ $85
Yes
↓ $80
Yes
↓ $75
Yes
↓ $70
Yes
↓ $65
No
↓ $60
No
↓ $50
No
↓ $40
No
↓ $25
No
$1,634,014 Vol.
↑ $200
No
↑ $170
No
↑ $150
No
↑ $140
No
↑ $130
No
↑ $125
No
↑ $120
No
↑ $115
No
↑ $110
No
↑ $105
No
↑ $100
No
↑ $95
No
↓ $85
Yes
↓ $80
Yes
↓ $75
Yes
↓ $70
Yes
↓ $65
No
↓ $60
No
↓ $50
No
↓ $40
No
↓ $25
No
For CME Silver (SI) futures contracts, the Active Month is the nearest of CME's designated delivery-cycle months (March, May, July, September, December) that is not the spot month. The Active Month becomes a non-active month effective on its First Position Date, at which point the next eligible contract month becomes the Active Month.
Only the Active Month's official settlement price published by CME Group will be considered. Intraday trades, highs, lows, bids, offers, midpoint values, or indicative prices do not count.
Note that the settlement price may differ from the last traded price. CME's methodology to determine the settlement price can vary by commodity and contract.
Only days on which CME publishes an official settlement price for the Active Month will be included. Days without settlement prices (weekends, holidays, or market closures) are ignored.
This market will resolve based on the settlement price as it appears on the CME settlement page at the time it is first published for that trading day, regardless of any later corrections or updates.
The resolution source for this market is the CME Group website — specifically, the daily "Settlement" price for the Active Month of Silver (SI) futures.
Market Opened: Mar 2, 2026, 6:17 PM ET
Resolver
0x65070BE91...Outcome proposed: No
No dispute
Final outcome: No
For CME Silver (SI) futures contracts, the Active Month is the nearest of CME's designated delivery-cycle months (March, May, July, September, December) that is not the spot month. The Active Month becomes a non-active month effective on its First Position Date, at which point the next eligible contract month becomes the Active Month.
Only the Active Month's official settlement price published by CME Group will be considered. Intraday trades, highs, lows, bids, offers, midpoint values, or indicative prices do not count.
Note that the settlement price may differ from the last traded price. CME's methodology to determine the settlement price can vary by commodity and contract.
Only days on which CME publishes an official settlement price for the Active Month will be included. Days without settlement prices (weekends, holidays, or market closures) are ignored.
This market will resolve based on the settlement price as it appears on the CME settlement page at the time it is first published for that trading day, regardless of any later corrections or updates.
The resolution source for this market is the CME Group website — specifically, the daily "Settlement" price for the Active Month of Silver (SI) futures.
Resolver
0x65070BE91...Outcome proposed: No
No dispute
Final outcome: No
Silver futures (SI) closed March 2026 with front-month contracts settling near $75 per ounce on March 31, capping a volatile month marked by a mid-March plunge below $70 amid U.S. dollar strength and risk-off sentiment, followed by a sharp 5% intraday rally driven by persistent supply deficits—projected at 67 million ounces—and surging industrial demand from solar and electronics sectors. Trader consensus on Polymarket reflected this resilience, pricing elevated implied probabilities for upper price targets despite a 20% monthly drawdown, correlated with gold's advance above $4,600. Key watchpoints include April nonfarm payrolls and FOMC minutes, which could influence rate cut expectations and precious metals risk appetite.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · Updated



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