The bank’s metals team is projecting silver could reach anywhere between $135 and $309 per ounce before the end of 2026. That is not a typo. And the reasoning behind it deserves more attention than most investors are giving it right now.
The math behind the targets
Both price targets are rooted in the gold-to-silver ratio, currently sitting at roughly 59:1, according to FastBull. The ratio measures how many ounces of silver it takes to buy one ounce of gold. The higher the number, the more undervalued silver looks relative to its historical relationship with gold.
Michael Widmer, Bank of America’s head of metals research, argues that if the ratio compresses toward historical lows, silver would have to reprice sharply higher. With gold trading near $5,000, the math produces two very different scenarios.
Applying the 2011 ratio low of 32:1 gives a silver price of $135. Applying the 1980 extreme of 14:1, the level hit during the Hunt Brothers silver squeeze, produces the $309 figure, Kitco reported.
Widmer acknowledged the uncertainty directly, noting that “the price could cap at $309” rather than guaranteeing it. His broader view is that silver could still meaningfully outperform gold in 2026 even if the extreme target is never reached, according to FastBull.
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