The precious metals market is currently the center of global financial discussion. With gold and silver reaching historic highs in 2025 and maintaining momentum into 2026, many investors are asking whether the rally has peaked or if we’re at the beginning of a larger structural shift.
At CanAm Bullion, we examine the data—and the headlines—to help Canadian investors navigate this critical “catch-up” phase. Whether it’s silver’s ratio to the U.S. monetary base or escalating transatlantic tensions, the case for physical bullion has rarely been stronger.
Silver vs. The Expansion of the U.S. Dollar
To understand silver’s true value today, we must look beyond spot prices and examine the monetary base—the total amount of currency in circulation plus reserve balances.
Silver’s Price Relative to Money Supply
When you buy silver today, the amount of U.S. dollars you’re using relative to the total supply of dollars in existence is almost identical to what investors paid in 1972. Despite silver’s recent price increases, the metal remains historically undervalued when measured against currency expansion.
Historically, silver only reaches its true cyclical peak when it catches up to total money supply expansion. For silver to match its 1980 high relative to today’s expanded dollar supply, it would need to reach approximately $1,630 per ounce.
This isn’t speculation—it’s mathematical comparison based on historical precedent. When silver hit $50 in 1980, the U.S. monetary base was a fraction of today’s supply. Adjusting for that expansion through quantitative easing, deficit spending, and post-crisis money creation reveals silver’s substantial upside potential.
The “Greenland Factor”: Hedging Against Geopolitical Volatility
In early 2026, the investment landscape has been disrupted by political uncertainty. President Trump’s aggressive campaign to acquire Greenland—coupled with threats of 25% tariffs on European allies including Denmark, France, and Germany—has sent shockwaves through traditional markets.
This instability is driving massive rotation into precious metals for several reasons:
The Breakdown of Alliances
Threats of a “trade war” within NATO have left investors questioning the stability of the post-WWII global order. When diplomatic relationships anchoring international commerce for decades come under stress, markets seek assets with intrinsic value independent of political agreements.
Currency Confidence Concerns
As diplomatic tensions rise, confidence in fiat currencies wavers. The dollar’s global reserve status depends partly on stable international relationships. When predictability disappears, investors view gold and silver as insurance against policy-driven shocks.
Safe-Haven Demand Acceleration
When news cycles are dominated by territorial annexation threats and retaliatory tariffs, paper assets become volatile. Physical bullion offers a tangible anchor not tied to any government’s diplomatic success.
For Canadian investors, this dynamic is especially relevant. As a trading nation with strong ties to both the U.S. and Europe, policy volatility affecting these relationships creates economic uncertainty that precious metals help hedge.
Silver and the Dow: A Historical Catch-Up Phase
Since the Federal Reserve’s creation in 1913, the Dow Jones has often outperformed silver—but only until the end of each long-term cycle. We’re now in what analysts call a “catch-up” phase where precious metals historically outperform equities.
Understanding the Silver-to-Dow Ratio
The relationship between silver prices and stock valuations reveals compelling insights:
- Relative to the Dow’s current valuation, you’re paying the same for silver today as investors paid in 1972—the beginning of one of history’s greatest precious metals bull markets
- To reach parity with the Dow’s growth since the Fed’s inception, silver would need to exceed $300 per ounce
- To match the 1980 high in terms of the Dow-to-silver ratio, silver would need to reach $2,785 per ounce
These historical comparisons aren’t predictions—they’re measurements of relative value. By these measures, silver remains substantially undervalued relative to both equities and the expanded money supply.
Lessons from the 2004 Bull Market
History doesn’t repeat exactly, but it often rhymes. The current bottoming pattern from 2014 to today mirrors the early 2000s consolidation that preceded the last major precious metals bull market.
In 2004, when silver traded around $6 per ounce, many thought they had “missed” the move after prices doubled from lows. Market commentary suggested silver was “too expensive” and easy gains were over.
In reality, 2004 marked the start of a massive bull run that took silver to $50 by 2011—more than 8x higher. Investors who waited for lower prices missed extraordinary gains.
Our current position suggests we’re in a similar early-stage window. Measured against monetary expansion, equity valuations, and historical precedent, we appear to be in early innings rather than late stages of this cycle.
Why These Factors Converge Now
What makes the current setup particularly compelling is the convergence of multiple bullish factors:
- Monetary Analysis: Silver undervalued versus monetary base expansion
- Ratio Analysis: Silver-to-Dow and silver-to-gold ratios suggest catch-up potential
- Supply-Demand: Persistent deficits and growing industrial demand
- Geopolitical Context: Escalating tensions drive safe-haven demand
- Technical Patterns: Multi-year consolidation suggests upside resolution
When multiple independent analytical approaches point in the same direction, conviction increases among sophisticated investors.
Why Canadian Investors Should Act Now
For Canadians specifically, several factors make precious metals particularly relevant:
Currency Considerations
Precious metals priced in USD offer hedge against CAD weakness.
Trade Exposure
Canada faces economic impacts from U.S.-Europe trade tensions that metals help mitigate.
Wealth Preservation
With inflation concerns and monetary policy uncertainty continuing, tangible assets offer protection financial instruments cannot replicate.
The Bottom Line
Between massive money supply expansion and a political climate defined by the Greenland dispute and tariff threats, the safe-haven status of gold and silver has shifted from theory to necessity.
Silver remains historically undervalued by multiple metrics simultaneously. Current global friction is accelerating the move toward hard assets as investors seek stability independent of political outcomes.
Secure Your Future with Physical Precious Metals
At CanAm Bullion, we help Canadian investors transition from paper-based uncertainty to the security of physical metal ownership. Whether you’re looking to buy silver, understand gold price outlook, or develop a comprehensive precious metals strategy, we’re ready to guide you.
We provide transparent pricing on gold and silver bullion, expert market analysis, secure storage options, and ongoing education about market dynamics.
The convergence of monetary expansion, geopolitical instability, and historical valuation patterns creates a compelling case for precious metals ownership in 2026. Don’t wait for confirmation—by then, substantial appreciation may have already occurred.
Ready to position your portfolio for 2026? Visit canambullion.ca or call us today at 1-877-513-9399 to discuss how gold and silver can provide stability and growth potential during uncertain times.
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CEO and Founder of CanAm Bullion has been dedicated to delivering exceptional value to Canadians since 2017. Driven by a mission to empower Canadians with expert investment advice and education, he has positioned CanAm Bullion as a trusted resource for those seeking to enhance their portfolios with precious metals. Under Michael’s leadership, the company has become synonymous with reliability, knowledge, and dedication, helping Canadians achieve greater financial stability and long-term success.


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