Close Menu
Money MechanicsMoney Mechanics
    What's Hot

    Iran crisis drives prices lower

    July 15, 2026

    Silver’s China Mine Crackdown Shows Why Higher Prices Cannot Quickly Lift Output

    July 15, 2026

    The U.K. Debt/GDP Ratio Is NOT Going To 1000%

    July 15, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Trending
    • Iran crisis drives prices lower
    • Silver’s China Mine Crackdown Shows Why Higher Prices Cannot Quickly Lift Output
    • The U.K. Debt/GDP Ratio Is NOT Going To 1000%
    • Inflation Guy’s CPI Summary (June 2026)
    • Turkey’s new energy playbook – Oil & Gas 360
    • Should Retirees Add An Annuity To Their Retirement Income Portfolio?
    • Nancy Guthrie Case Takes Bizarre Turn as YouTubers Face Arrests
    • Speech by Vice Chair for Supervision Bowman on responsible innovation and financial inclusion
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Money MechanicsMoney Mechanics
    • Home
    • Markets
      • Stocks
      • Crypto
      • Bonds
      • Commodities
    • Economy
      • Fed & Rates
      • Housing & Jobs
      • Inflation
    • Earnings
      • Banks
      • Energy
      • Healthcare
      • IPOs
      • Tech
    • Investing
      • ETFs
      • Long-Term
      • Options
    • Finance
      • Budgeting
      • Credit & Debt
      • Real Estate
      • Retirement
      • Taxes
    • Opinion
    • Guides
    • Tools
    • Resources
    Money MechanicsMoney Mechanics
    Home»Markets»Commodities»Silver’s China Mine Crackdown Shows Why Higher Prices Cannot Quickly Lift Output
    Commodities

    Silver’s China Mine Crackdown Shows Why Higher Prices Cannot Quickly Lift Output

    Money MechanicsBy Money MechanicsJuly 15, 2026No Comments5 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Telegram Pinterest Tumblr Reddit WhatsApp Email
    Silver’s China Mine Crackdown Shows Why Higher Prices Cannot Quickly Lift Output
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email


    For the first time this cycle, a miner has filed hard numbers on a forced production cut, and a mine-safety crackdown in China is behind it, not anything the price did.

    today, having slipped back below its early-July low. The metal is down roughly 18% from where it closed 2025, near $71, and it sits about 52% below the all-time high of $121.62 set on January 29, though it remains up more than half from a year ago. Against , the is about 69. The correction of the past two months has been a monetary story, driven by a firm dollar and a hawkish Federal Reserve as renewed US-Iran tension lifts oil and inflation risk, rather than anything that happened in silver’s own supply and demand.

    Underneath that price, the structural picture has not changed. The market is on track for its sixth consecutive annual deficit, forecast at 46.3 million ounces for 2026 by Metals Focus and the Silver Institute, meaning the world is set to use more silver than it produces for the sixth year running. Much of the bull case has rested on a single claim: that silver supply cannot respond to a higher price the way most commodities do, because roughly three-quarters of it comes out of the ground as a byproduct of mining copper, lead, zinc, and gold, and you cannot will more of it into existence by drilling a silver mine. This window gave that argument a concrete, quantified example, and it came from an unexpected direction.

    The Silvercorp Cut

    On June 29, , a Canadian-listed company that operates silver mines in China, disclosed that an intensifying mine-safety crackdown will cut its production over the July-to-September quarter. Output at its Ying district will fall by 40% to 50%, its GC mine by roughly 50%, and the company as a whole expects a reduction of 10% to 15% this quarter. Set against Silvercorp’s most recent full-year output of about 6.3 million ounces at Ying and 0.5 million at GC, the cut puts somewhere between 0.9 and 1.1 million ounces of silver at risk across the affected quarters.

    The important part is not the company. It is the reason. The trigger was a fatal coal-mine accident in Shanxi province in late May that pushed Beijing to extend its long-standing “Six Major Safety Systems” requirements to every underground non-coal mine in the country, backed by a national monitoring network that now tracks more than a million sensors in real time. For Silvercorp, complying means spending about $5.5 million on certified safety-system installations over roughly 50 days, plus another $6 million on facility and equipment upgrades, close to $11.5 million in all. That is money spent to keep operating, not to produce more, and it raises the real cost of every ounce that still comes out.

    Silver’s China Supply Cut

    Sources: Silvercorp — Updates on China Operations | Silvercorp — FY2026 Results and FY2027 Guidance | StockTitan — Silvercorp 6-K | SBS — Shanxi Mine Disaster | CGTN — China’s Mine-Safety Sensor Network | The Globe and Mail — Silvercorp Slows China Mines as New Safety Rules Bite | Metals Focus and the Silver Institute — World Silver Survey 2026

    Silvercorp is one operator, but the rule that hit it applies to every underground metal mine in China, which is why the same enforcement that slowed Silvercorp could remove several million more ounces across the country, even though only the Silvercorp figure is firm today. China is a major silver producer and an even larger force in refining, so the direction of travel matters more than the figure from any single company.

    What This Means to Silver Investors

    Keep the size honest first. A cut of 0.9 to 1.1 million ounces is small against the roughly 846.6 million ounces the world’s mines produced in 2025, barely more than a tenth of one percent, and by itself it does not move the annual balance. Anyone selling this as an overnight shortage is overselling it.

    What makes it matter is the mechanism. The claim that silver’s supply cannot answer a higher price gets its obvious test when the price rises sharply, as it did to record highs into early 2026. The answer this window is that supply did not expand, it contracted, and it contracted for a reason a higher price cannot reverse. A safety crackdown pulled ounces offline that a far higher price could not have called forth and cannot bring back. If supply bends that way under enforcement while it refuses to bend upward under price, then the supply side that underwrites a sixth straight deficit is even less able to answer a rally than the balance assumes.

    That is the quiet significance here: not the tonnage, but the proof of concept. In Issue #19, I discussed the two-speed split between a rebuilding New York vault and a rising Shanghai premium, a market where the West looks amply supplied while the East pays up to hold physical. The Silvercorp cut sits on the same side of the ledger as that Eastern tightness: evidence that the physical squeeze runs deeper than the Western paper price lets on. None of this points to a particular level on the chart, and I would be wary of anyone who says it does. The longer-term case for silver rests on a structural deficit and a supply base that cannot easily grow, and this window added a piece of evidence that the second half of that sentence is real.





    Source link

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email
    Previous ArticleThe U.K. Debt/GDP Ratio Is NOT Going To 1000%
    Next Article Iran crisis drives prices lower
    Money Mechanics
    • Website

    Related Posts

    9 Stocks With Strong Rebound Potential in the Second Half of 2026

    July 14, 2026

    Hormuz Tolls Are Coming, and So Is a New Tax on the World’s Energy

    July 14, 2026

    Could Gold Break $4,000 This Week?

    July 13, 2026
    Add A Comment
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Top Posts

    Iran crisis drives prices lower

    July 15, 2026

    Silver’s China Mine Crackdown Shows Why Higher Prices Cannot Quickly Lift Output

    July 15, 2026

    The U.K. Debt/GDP Ratio Is NOT Going To 1000%

    July 15, 2026

    Inflation Guy’s CPI Summary (June 2026)

    July 15, 2026

    Subscribe to Updates

    Please enable JavaScript in your browser to complete this form.
    Loading

    At Money Mechanics, we believe money shouldn’t be confusing. It should be empowering. Whether you’re buried in debt, cautious about investing, or simply overwhelmed by financial jargon—we’re here to guide you every step of the way.

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest YouTube
    Links
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Disclaimer
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions
    Resources
    • Breaking News
    • Economy & Policy
    • Finance Tools
    • Fintech & Apps
    • Guides & How-To
    Get Informed

    Subscribe to Updates

    Please enable JavaScript in your browser to complete this form.
    Loading
    Copyright© 2025 TheMoneyMechanics All Rights Reserved.
    • Breaking News
    • Economy & Policy
    • Finance Tools
    • Fintech & Apps
    • Guides & How-To

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.