Prata: preço hoje em Prata (cotação em tempo real de Prata em USD/Onça)
1 onça de Prata custa hoje 0.000 USD (-1.91%).
Prata: preço de hoje (USD/Onça)
Prata: gráfico de preços em tempo real em USD/Onça (1 dia)
Prata – Seicheles: desempenho do preço
| Tempo | Variação | Variação (%) |
|---|---|---|
| Hoje | -1.77 USD | -1.91% |
| 7 dias | +10.96 USD | +13.71% |
| 30 dias | +24.93 USD | +37.72% |
| 90 dias | +39.20 USD | +75.61% |
| 1 ano | +17.90 USD | +24.63% |
Prata: preço atual por Onça em USD
| Onça | Hoje | Variação (%) |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | 90.76 USD | -1.91% |
| 5 | 453.82 USD | -1.91% |
| 8 | 726.11 USD | -1.91% |
| 10 | 907.64 USD | -1.91% |
| 100 | 9076.40 USD | -1.91% |
Prata price overview today
As of 2026-01-16 07:12 EST, the current price of Prata is 90.7640 USD per Onça, a change of -1.91% from the previous trading day's closing price. Today's high for Prata was 92.7980 USD ; today's low for Prata was 89.4560 USD.
For more information on silver prices, please visit the Prata: preço de hoje page. If you would also like to learn more about gold prices, please check Ouro: preço de hoje and Ouro – Seicheles: preço de hoje.
Sobre a Bitget
The world's first Universal Exchange (UEX), where users can trade not only cryptocurrencies, but also traditional financial assets such as stocks, gold, forex, indices, and commodities.
In December 2025, Bitget officially launched the Bitget TradFi platform. You no longer need to open a traditional brokerage account; you can directly trade traditional assets such as stocks, gold, forex, indices, and commodities on the Bitget platform using your existing Bitget cryptocurrency account.
You can use USDT directly as margin to trade assets such as XAUUSD (Gold/USD) and XAGUSD (Silver/USD).
What caused today's Prata price fluctuations?
1. Dados económicos dos EUA e especulação sobre "aterragem suave"
Os dados recentes do mercado de trabalho e os índices de preços do produtor (PPI) revelaram uma resiliência inesperada da economia norte-americana. Isto levou a uma reavaliação das expectativas do mercado quanto ao ritmo dos cortes de taxas da Reserva Federal. Enquanto os investidores debatem se o Fed irá pausar ou avançar com um corte de 25 pontos base na próxima reunião, a prata — um ativo sem rendimento — está a registar oscilações acentuadas de preço, impulsionadas pela sensibilidade às taxas de juro.
2. Aumento da procura industrial versus restrições de inventário
O mercado da prata enfrenta atualmente um défice estrutural. O aumento da procura do setor fotovoltaico (PV) solar e a expansão da infraestrutura eletrónica relacionada com IA estão em conflito com uma oferta estagnada das minas de prata. Relatórios sobre a diminuição dos stocks em armazéns de grandes bolsas como a COMEX e a LBMA desencadearam receios de "short squeeze", levando a picos intradiários rápidos seguidos de correções técnicas.
3. Força do dólar e resistência técnica
O índice do dólar dos EUA (DXY) tem demonstrado força significativa recentemente, atingindo níveis de resistência importantes. Como a prata é cotada em dólares, qualquer valorização do dólar exerce pressão imediata sobre o metal. Além disso, a prata tem tido dificuldades em manter a quebra acima da faixa psicológica dos $30-$32, levando a vendas algorítmicas intensas e realização de lucros sempre que o preço se aproxima destes "tectos" técnicos.
4. Rotação para ativos de refúgio e tensões geopolíticas
As incertezas contínuas nas relações comerciais globais e os conflitos regionais no Médio Oriente e na Europa de Leste continuam a direcionar capital "risk-off" para metais preciosos. No entanto, o elevado beta da prata (maior volatilidade em relação ao ouro) significa que, quando o ouro estabiliza, a prata tende a apresentar movimentos exagerados, à medida que o "dinheiro quente" especulativo entra e sai do metal em busca de ganhos rápidos.
5. Ajustes na relação ouro-prata
A relação ouro-prata tem oscilado recentemente perto de níveis extremos históricos. Os investidores institucionais estão a reequilibrar ativamente os portfólios, vendendo ouro para comprar prata "subvalorizada" ou vice-versa. Esta rotação ocorre frequentemente em rajadas de elevado volume, contribuindo para a ação de preço "agitada" observada nas sessões de Londres e Nova Iorque.
2026 silver price forecast
These silver price forecasts for 2026 are based on market research reports from well-known international investment banks and institutions as of the end of 2025.
International investment banks and institutions predict that silver prices will stabilize within a broad range of $40 to $65 per ounce by 2026. A series of studies from Wall Street indicate that the outlook for silver prices depends on five major factors: industrial demand, liquidity risk, hedging needs, investment (speculative) trends, and policy-related challenges.
Bullish views on silver focus on several themes, including strong demand driven by the clean energy industry, a macroeconomic environment that supports safe-haven demand, a further decline in the gold–silver ratio, and the potential for key U.S. mining policies to exacerbate supply–demand imbalances for silver. UBS believes that the use of silver in electronics and photovoltaics supports industrial demand for silver, and that loose monetary and fiscal policies will further boost silver prices.
However, some cautionary signals remain. The World Bank is cautiously optimistic about silver prices, predicting an average price of $41 per ounce in 2026. It also suggests that the rally may end in 2027, with average prices declining to around $37 per ounce. Goldman Sachs notes that silver's gains in 2025 have already been substantial, indicating that a price correction is possible and that silver may face elevated volatility and downside risks in the near term.
For investors, assessing silver at this stage requires an understanding of its high volatility. In past cycles, silver prices have experienced dramatic surges, only to be followed by sharp declines.
Comparison table of silver price forecasts by major institutions
Bullish view on silver prices—three core reasons supporting silver prices in 2026
1. Silver's structural supply gap enters its fifth year
- Continuous deficit: The Silver Institute predicts that by 2026, the silver market will have experienced a physical supply deficit for the fifth consecutive year.
- Mining bottlenecks: Approximately 70–80% of silver is produced as a byproduct of base metals such as copper, lead, and zinc. This limits mining companies' ability to respond quickly to demand growth. Even if silver prices rise, mines are unlikely to significantly expand production solely to increase silver output, resulting in extremely low supply elasticity.
- Silver added to the U.S. Critical Minerals List: The U.S. Geological Survey released its 2025 Critical Minerals List to assess the potential impact of mineral supply disruptions on the U.S. economy and national security. Silver was among the 10 new minerals added to the final list. According to the Financial Times, concerns over potential U.S. tariffs on silver prompted U.S. institutions to begin stockpiling silver in large quantities in the second half of 2025, further exacerbating supply shortages and supporting higher prices.
2. New growth drivers in industrial demand (AI and green transition)
- Photovoltaic industry: Despite the emergence of thrifting technologies, unexpectedly strong growth in global photovoltaic installations has offset the decline in silver consumption per unit.
- AI hardware: Silver has the highest electrical conductivity among metals. As 2026 is expected to mark large-scale deployment of AI infrastructure—such as data centers and high-performance servers—demand for silver in electronic components is likely to increase significantly.
3. The return of the gold–silver ratio and its driving effect on gold
- Safe-haven demand: Fed rate cuts, geopolitical tensions, and rising inflation have led investors to increasingly view silver as a hedge against inflation and a weakening dollar.
- Gold spillover effect: Goldman Sachs and Bank of America both forecast that gold prices could reach $4500–$5000 in 2026. Historically, silver has often demonstrated stronger catch-up performance in the later stages of a gold bull market.
- Gold–silver ratio correction: Institutions expect the gold–silver ratio to adjust toward the 60–70 range by 2026, influencing silver price movements.
Concerns about silver prices—potential downside risks
While most institutions remain bullish, several negative factors could limit silver prices in 2026.
Potential slowdown in photovoltaic demand: Morgan Stanley warns that changes in Chinese photovoltaic policies and substitution effects (such as copper paste replacing silver paste) due to high silver prices could lead to a peak in silver demand for photovoltaic applications by 2026.
Inventory replenishment: TD Securities notes that silver inventories at London's LBMA have recently shown signs of stabilization. If the physical supply shortage eases in 2026, speculative funds may withdraw.
Geopolitical de-escalation: If localized conflicts ease globally in 2026, declining risk aversion could put pressure on precious metals, including silver.
Summary: Lessons for investors
The central theme for silver in 2026 may be a departure from the era of low prices, with $40 or higher potentially becoming the new price center.
Key indicators to watch: Pay close attention to the Federal Reserve's interest rate path (low interest rates are beneficial to silver) and changes in China's photovoltaic installation data.
Silver price review and outlook
How has the price of silver fluctuated over the past decade or so?
- Macroeconomic relationships matter: The dollar's performance, interest rates, inflation, and industrial demand (especially in new energy and electronics) have a significant impact on silver prices.
- Combine cyclical and trend-following factors: Silver should not be viewed solely as a safe-haven asset; its industrial applications also play an important role.
- Entry and exit timing: Buying opportunities may arise during periods of monetary easing, rising inflation expectations, or surging industrial demand. Conversely, pullbacks may occur during periods of economic slowdown or interest rate hike expectations.
- Comparison with crypto trading: Compared with crypto assets, silver is generally more influenced by macroeconomic conditions. It is more "traditional" in nature, while still retaining industrial characteristics, and can serve as a hedge or diversification asset in a portfolio.
What has caused fluctuations in silver prices over the past decade or so?
- 2015–2018: A strong U.S. dollar during the Fed's rate-hike cycle pushed silver prices down from around $20 per ounce to $14 per ounce.
- 2020–2021: Extremely loose global monetary policy weakened the U.S. dollar, driving silver prices sharply higher to around $30 per ounce.
- 2022–2023: Aggressive Fed rate hikes and a soaring dollar caused silver prices to fluctuate and decline.
- 2024–2025: The U.S. dollar weakened again, and the market bet on interest rate cuts, pushing silver to $80 per ounce.
- 2018–2019: Rapid growth in demand for photovoltaic silver paste led to a steady increase in silver prices.
- 2020–2021: Expansion of the new energy industry chain (particularly in China and India) pushed prices higher due to industrial demand.
- 2024–2025: The global energy transition accelerates, and silver is increasingly seen as a "green metal," with prices returning to $80+.
- 2020–2021: a flexibilização quantitativa global e a disparada da inflação fazem a prata subir para US$ 30.
- 2022–2023: as altas de juros do Fed contêm a inflação, levando à queda da prata.
- 2024–2025: The global energy transition accelerates, and silver is increasingly seen as a "green metal," with prices returning to $80+.
- 2020 Reddit silver squeeze: Retail investors drove large inflows into SLV, causing a short-term surge in silver prices.
- Institutional allocation: When inflation expectations are high, the U.S. dollar weakens, and the gold–silver ratio is elevated, funds tend to increase their exposure to silver.
- Algorithmic trading and commodity index funds: These participants can amplify short-term price volatility.
- Summary: Silver volatility stems partly from speculative capital, not just supply and demand; as a result, short-term price movements often exceed what fundamentals alone would suggest.
- Mine closures (2015–2016): Low prices led to the shutdown of some silver mines.
- New mine commissioning (2019–2022): Increased production in Mexico, Peru, and other countries added to the global supply.
- Growth in recycled silver: Improvements in electronic waste recycling systems increased supply elasticity to some extent.
- 2024–2025: Rising demand for silver concentrate, driven by expanded green energy production, contributed to renewed supply shortages.
- Summary: Supply shortages reinforced the upward trend during the price rally, but they were not the primary drivers.
Why did silver prices surge 170% in 2025?
- The price of silver breaking through $80 in December 2025 marks the beginning of a move toward its third peak in the past 50 years, with the specific level of this third peak likely to be seen in the coming years. According to U.S. media reports, the first peak in silver prices occurred in January 1980, when the Hunt brothers hoarded one-third of the global silver supply in an attempt to monopolize the market. The second peak occurred in April 2011, when silver and gold were considered safe-haven assets during the U.S. debt ceiling crisis.
- Unlike previous investment booms, Wall Street analysts believe that the silver boom in 2025 was driven by both low supply and high demand. Industrial demand, a weakening dollar, trade wars, global geopolitical tensions, and low market liquidity are considered the main driving factors.
- Silver prices are influenced by both industrial and investment demand. According to statistics from the World Silver Institute, the ratio of industrial to investment demand for silver is approximately 6:4. Industrial applications of silver are concentrated in electronics, photovoltaics, soldering materials, photography, and silver jewelry. Since 2021, with the explosive growth of the photovoltaic and electric vehicle industries, silver supply bottlenecks have posed a serious challenge to the modern industrial chain. Related media reports indicate that the global silver market has been in a structural deficit for five consecutive years. Data for 2025 shows that global silver demand will reach 1.24 billion ounces, while supply will total only 1.01 billion ounces, meaning the market faces a supply gap of between 100 million and 250 million ounces. This supply-demand imbalance is described as a "structural deficit," with no signs of a rapid recovery. An even more serious signal comes from the sharp decline in inventory data. Since 2020, COMEX (New York Mercantile Exchange) silver inventories have decreased by 70%, while London vault inventories have fallen by 40%. Silver prices have risen sharply since late November, with short squeezes caused by tight spot supply emerging as a core driver.
- Some analysts believe that, in addition to the surge in silver prices in 2025, heightened retail investor participation has pushed the silver market to extremes, with market speculation significantly intensifying. Some investors are purchasing silver at inflated prices simply due to rapid price increases. Retail participation spans multiple forms, including physical silver accumulation, silver ETFs, and derivatives trading. This group includes both traditional precious metals investors and a large number of short-term, sentiment-driven traders. Trading volumes of options contracts related to the world's largest silver ETF, iShares Silver Trust, have recently surged, reaching their highest level since the Reddit-driven retail trading frenzy of 2021. This short-term and rapid rise appears to have overextended long-term bullish fundamentals, and the elevated level of speculation poses potential risks to market stability.
- As prices of precious metals such as silver continue to soar, Wall Street analysts warn that silver prices often exhibit volatile patterns, characterized by rapid increases followed by sharp corrections. While this volatility presents trading opportunities, it also carries significant risks, and investors must remain vigilant regarding market cycle shifts. The current rally, driven by both retail investor sentiment and industrial demand, is further exacerbating volatility risks in the silver market. Capital Economics analysts wrote in a report, "Precious metal prices have risen to levels we believe are difficult to explain by fundamentals." They predict that as the gold frenzy subsides, silver prices may fall back to around $42 per ounce by the end of next year. UBS has also warned that the recent surge in precious metal prices is largely attributable to insufficient market liquidity, making a rapid pullback highly likely.
- Similar to gold, silver has long been favored by some investors for its traditional attributes as a hedge against inflation, protection against sovereign debt risk, and insurance against financial system uncertainty. Since 2025, a macroeconomic environment characterized by declining bond yields and high stock valuations has provided additional impetus for investors to increase allocations to precious metal assets.
- Bullish investors emphasize that, after adjusting for inflation, silver prices would need to rise above $200 per ounce to surpass the historical peak of 1980, implying further upside potential from current levels. More cautious investors argue that silver's relatively small market size and lower liquidity compared with gold make it more susceptible to sharp, short-term price spikes followed by significant pullbacks. This necessitates a more prudent risk management approach for investors participating in the silver market.
What is the expected performance of silver prices by 2030?
- Industrial demand: Silver is not only a precious metal but also an industrial metal. Its use in solar cells (photovoltaics), electric vehicles, and electronic devices continues to expand. Rapid growth in the new energy and photovoltaic markets could provide a structural foundation for higher silver prices.
- Macroeconomic environment and the U.S. dollar / interest rates: Silver is priced in U.S. dollars. A weaker dollar and low (or negative) real interest rates tend to support silver prices, while a stronger dollar suppresses them. This pattern has held historically. If the dollar continues to weaken or global central banks expand monetary easing, silver may benefit. Conversely, intensified rate hikes and a stronger dollar could increase resistance.
- Supply-side conditions: Although silver mining has grown slowly for many years, a sharp rise in industrial demand without a corresponding increase in supply could create a structural shortage and push prices higher. Some forecasts already point to a supply gap. Meanwhile, developments in recycled silver and other silver products also warrant attention.
- Safe-haven and investment demand: In an environment of heightened global uncertainty—such as inflation risks, financial system stress, or geopolitical tensions—silver may be viewed as a "cheaper alternative to gold." However, some argue that silver is not yet as widely adopted as gold in central bank reserves.
- Technology, market sentiment, and leveraged funds: Speculation, ETF holdings, and technical breakouts can also trigger short-term price surges. Traders should remain alert to these potentially "explosive" signals.
- Experts' forecasts for silver prices in 2030 vary widely, depending on different market models and assumptions:
- Moderate forecast: Conservative forecasters believe that if the future macroeconomic environment remains neutral, industrial demand grows moderately, the U.S. dollar remains stable, and there is no major surge in silver demand, silver prices may fluctuate in the range of $60 to $90 per ounce.
- General forecast: Many analysts expect prices to reach around $80 to $120 per ounce. Their reasoning mainly focuses on strong industrial demand, a weaker dollar, and some investment demand, but without an explosive breakthrough.
- Optimistic forecasts: Some more optimistic projections, such as Just2Trade's analysis, suggest that silver prices could reach $225 per ounce by 2030. Industry leaders, including the CEO of First Majestic Silver, have also set target prices of $100 per ounce or higher. These forecasts are primarily based on expectations of explosive industrial demand from photovoltaics and electric vehicles, severe supply lags, a loose macroeconomic environment, and strong investment sentiment.
- If the dollar rebounds, interest rates rise sharply, and the economic focus shifts toward a tightening cycle, silver may come under pressure.
- While industrial demand is growing, silver demand could weaken if industries such as photovoltaics or electric vehicles face supply-chain bottlenecks, experience slower growth, or adopt alternative materials.
- As propriedades de “porto seguro” da prata são mais fracas do que as do ouro. Se os investidores destinarem mais capital ao ouro do que à prata, o potencial de alta da prata pode ficar limitado.
- Market sentiment, high leverage, ETF outflows, and the risk of a significant correction remain key concerns.
- Long-term forecasts inherently carry wide margins of error. With several years remaining until 2030, any black-swan event—such as geopolitical shocks, economic crises, or major policy changes—could materially alter the outlook.
- Treat silver as a medium-term swing trading tool: If you are bullish on industrial transformation and loose monetary policy, you may consider establishing a medium-term long position.
- Look for low-entry opportunities during pullbacks: Consider partially building a position when prices pull back or correct (for example, in the $40–50 per ounce range).
- Set reasonable targets while allowing for upside in the event of a breakout. For example, set a base target of $80 per ounce, and consider raising the target to $90–100 per ounce when conditions are favorable.
- Risk management: If you observe a strengthening dollar, continued interest rate increases, or weakening demand signals, remain cautious of pullbacks and adjust positions, stop-loss levels, or take profits in a timely manner.
- Monitor key macroeconomic indicators: Pay close attention to the U.S. Dollar Index (DXY), U.S. real interest rates, silver demand data from photovoltaics and electric vehicles, and silver production and inventory data. These indicators can help guide decisions on when to enter, add to, or reduce positions.
- The above summary is based on market analysis and does not constitute investment advice.
Seicheles: compra da prata
Seicheles: existem muitos tipos de produtos de prata e opções de trading disponíveis, e a possibilidade de comprar prata depende do tipo de produto que você escolhe.
Se você deseja operar prata em spot, futuros de prata, CFDs de prata ou ETFs de prata, pode escolher uma corretora de prata local ou um mercado global de commodities, como a London Metal Exchange (LME), a New York Mercantile Exchange (COMEX), o Zurich Gold Market, a Hong Kong Gold Exchange (CGSE), a Shanghai Gold Exchange (SGE), a Tokyo Commodity Exchange (TOCOM) ou a Dubai Gold and Commodities Exchange (DGCX). No entanto, você deve primeiro entender as regulamentações locais para determinar se esses produtos são permitidos.
Seicheles: se você preferir comprar barras ou moedas de prata física, pode fazê-lo por meio de distribuidores locais.
Além de comprar prata e ouro, muitas pessoas e instituições também adquirem criptomoedas, como Bitcoin, ou tokens lastreados em prata, para se protegerem contra riscos inesperados.
Saiba maisSeicheles: como obter o melhor preço da prata?
Esta página exibe o preço spot da prata, que se baseia no trading global 24 horas. As operações em spot da prata são operadas das 20h de domingo às 19h de sexta-feira (BRT), com uma pausa de uma hora após as 19h todos os dias.
O preço spot da prata se refere ao preço atual por onça troy de prata. Ele reflete o valor da prata em sua forma bruta antes de ser vendida aos comerciantes de barras de prata e é usado como referência para a fixação dos preços de barras e moedas de prata.
O preço spot da prata oscila constantemente devido a vários fatores.
Os fatores que afetam as variações do preço spot da prata incluem a oferta e a demanda, acontecimentos internacionais e previsões especulativas sobre o mercado da prata. De Londres a Hong Kong e de Zurique a Tóquio, o trading de prata acontece 24 horas por dia. Essa atividade global contínua influencia ainda mais os preços spot da prata e os preços dos produtos relacionados à prata.
Seicheles: para obter o melhor preço da prata, é importante acompanhar de perto as tendências do preço spot da prata.
Sobre os preços e gráficos da prata na Bitget
Os preços da prata na Bitget são determinados usando dados do mercado global da prata em tempo real. Nossos gráficos podem ser personalizados por intervalo de tempo e data, e incluem dados históricos. Os traders podem usar gráficos em tempo real e várias telas para acompanhar os movimentos dos preços e aplicar indicadores técnicos para uma análise mais eficaz. Outros compradores de prata também utilizam nossos gráficos para acompanhar os preços atuais da prata sem depender de indicadores mais complexos normalmente utilizados pelos traders.