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Silver Price Prediction by Robert Kiyosaki for 2026

Silver Price Prediction by Robert Kiyosaki for 2026

Silver’s rally is no longer being treated as a short-term anomaly by one of its most persistent supporters. Instead of warning about overheating, Robert Kiyosaki is arguing that the metal may still be in the early innings of a much larger move that the market has not fully priced in yet.

Rather than framing recent gains as a peak, Kiyosaki has positioned silver’s rise as a reset. In his view, prices moving beyond the $70 level represent a psychological shift, not a finishing line. He believes the metal is transitioning from being overlooked to being repriced, driven by forces that extend well beyond trader sentiment.

A repricing story, not a blow-off

Kiyosaki’s outlook centers on the idea that silver has been structurally undervalued for years. He argues that long-running monetary expansion, chronic supply tightness, and accelerating industrial demand are now converging. That combination, in his assessment, creates conditions for prices to travel much further than most investors expect.

This is why he has floated a wide and controversial projection for the years ahead, suggesting silver could plausibly trade anywhere between $70 and $200 as the cycle matures. While he admits the upper end of that range is extreme, he sees it as a function of imbalance rather than speculation.

Why this rally looks different

The backdrop to his comments matters. Silver has recently pushed to fresh record territory near $79 per ounce, supported not just by investor demand but by real-world consumption. Expanding use in solar panels, electronics, and electric vehicles has tightened supply at the same time that expectations for looser U.S. monetary policy have strengthened demand for hard assets.

Unlike past spikes driven largely by fear or leverage, this rally is unfolding alongside persistent deficits in physical supply. For Kiyosaki, that distinction is critical. It suggests durability rather than excess.

Conviction built over decades

Kiyosaki often frames his views through personal experience, and silver is no exception. He has said he began accumulating the metal decades ago when prices were below one dollar an ounce and never stopped, regardless of volatility. That history informs how he thinks about investing: as a process of accumulation rather than prediction.

He consistently emphasizes that silver ownership is not about timing tops or bottoms. Instead, he encourages gradual positioning based on independent research, accepting that mistakes are inevitable but manageable over the long run.

Crash fears still shape the thesis

Despite his optimism on silver, Kiyosaki remains pessimistic about the broader economy. He continues to warn that financial markets are vulnerable to a major downturn and that traditional assets may struggle if liquidity tightens or confidence breaks.

In that environment, he believes alternative assets offer insulation. Alongside silver and gold, he has repeatedly pointed to Bitcoin as part of a defensive strategy against currency debasement and systemic risk.

With precious metals posting strong gains throughout 2025, some investors interpret the rally as a warning sign of rising economic stress. Kiyosaki sees it differently. For him, silver’s strength is not a signal to exit, but evidence that a long-delayed adjustment may finally be underway.

Author
Alexander Stefanov - Editor-in-Chief at Coinspress
Alexander Stefanov

Reporter at CoinsPress

Alex is Editor-in-Chief of Coinspress and co-founder of Millennial Media Group, with nearly a decade of experience covering financial markets - crypto first, then everything else. It started in 2016 with Bitcoin. Like most people at the time, he didn't fully understand it - so he kept digging. Blockchain, tokenomics, the projects, the cycles. That curiosity never stopped, and eventually pulled him into traditional markets too: equities, commodities, macro. Not because he left crypto behind, but because you can't properly understand one without the other. What drives him is straightforward: he wants to know why something is happening, not just that it's happening. Most market coverage stops at the headline - price up, price down, here's a chart. Alex finds that kind of reporting actively unhelpful. If you walk away from an article without understanding the mechanism behind the move, what did you actually learn? He holds a degree in Tourism from New Bulgarian University - not the most obvious path into financial markets, but markets have a way of pulling in people who are simply too curious to stay out. He has authored over 200 in-depth analyses and more than 10,000 articles across crypto and traditional finance. He still thinks every day in markets teaches him something new. That's probably why he hasn't stopped.

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