SILVER Act Would Reshape How U.S. Precious Metals Markets Manage Risk

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A group of U.S. lawmakers has introduced legislation known as the SILVER Act, aiming to reduce systemic risk within the country’s precious metals market infrastructure. The bill signals growing congressional attention to the structural vulnerabilities that underpin physical and paper metals trading.

Federal legislators have put forward the SILVER Act, a bill designed to address risk concentration and infrastructure fragility in U.S. precious metals markets. While full legislative text and co-sponsor details are still being reviewed, the broad intent is to strengthen the plumbing that supports gold, silver, and related commodity trading — from clearing and settlement to custodial arrangements.

Precious metals markets, though often discussed in terms of price and safe-haven demand, rely on a layered network of exchanges, warehouses, clearinghouses, and financial intermediaries. Disruptions to any node in that chain — as seen during periods of acute market stress — can amplify price swings and create delivery failures that ripple across the broader commodities complex.

Legislative interest in commodities market infrastructure is not new. In the wake of episodes like the 2020 gold and silver basis dislocations, when physical premiums surged and futures delivery mechanisms came under strain, observers called for a closer look at whether existing frameworks were adequate for periods of high demand or financial stress. The SILVER Act appears to be a response to that ongoing conversation.

For investors who hold physical metal, ETFs, or futures positions, stronger market infrastructure generally supports tighter spreads, more reliable settlement, and greater confidence that contracts will perform as written. That backdrop tends to be supportive of participation across the metals complex, though the direct price impact of regulatory reform is typically indirect and longer-term.

The bill’s progress will depend on committee review, and precious metals legislation has historically moved slowly through Congress. Markets are unlikely to price in any immediate change, but the introduction itself reflects a broader institutional acknowledgment that the metals trading ecosystem warrants attention at the federal level.

We’ll be watching for committee hearings, additional co-sponsors, and any formal legislative text that clarifies the bill’s specific mechanisms.

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