Default Image
16, Mar 2026
The $4.6 Billion Mistake: India Chased Silver to $120 — Then Blinked at the Dip – Vallum Capital
 

A tale of two investors — and how the same trade played out in completely opposite ways
 
According to Vallum Capital Research, Between January 2022 and February 2026, silver went from a quiet, overlooked metal to one of the most talked-about trades in global markets. Prices surged from $24 to a peak of $120 per ounce — a 400% run that made headlines and turned heads. But buried inside the flow data of silver ETFs lies a far more instructive story: one of timing, psychology, and the costly gap between informed capital and reactive money.
 
The report highlights a clear divergence in behavior between Indian retail investors and global institutional players, identifying four distinct phases in the Silver ETF Net Flow – Jan 2022 – Feb 2026.
 
GLOBAL: Silver ETF Net Flow Phase Analysis  |  Jan 2022 – Feb 2026  
Source: Morningstar period-end cumulative flows (HS338–HS345), distributed by momentum  •  Silver in USD/oz
No
Phase
Period
No. of
Silver Price
Silver Price
Silver Price
India Total
India Avg/Mo
India Total
India Avg/Mo 
Global Total
Global Avg/Mo
India
Global
 
 
 
Months
Start (USD/oz)
End (USD/oz)
Return %
Net Flows (₹ Cr)
(₹ Cr)
Net Flows (USD Mn)
(USD Mn)
Flows (USD M)
(USD M)
Behavior
Behavior
1
Selling
Jan 2022 – Feb 2025
38
$24.00
$32.10
33.80%
13,306.80
350.2
1,574.80
41.40
-4,055.50
-106.7
Steady buying; ₹350 Cr avg/mo;
Structural exit; −$4,056M total;
2
Buying
Mar 2025 – Aug 2025
6
$33.20
$39.10
17.80%
10,485.90
1,747.60
1,240.90
206.80
4,853.50
808.9
Accelerating inflows;
Strong coordinated buying;
3
Selling
Sep 2025 – Jan 2026
5
$42.50
$120.00
182.40%
38,885.80
7,777.20
4,601.90
920.40
-3,549.70
-709.9
🔴 FOMO peak; ₹7,777 Cr avg/mo;
Sold into the rally; −$3,550M;
4
Buying
Feb-26
1
$81.58
$81.58
0.00%
-850
-850
-100.6
-100.6
1,787.90
1,787.90
🔴 Panic sell; −₹850 Cr; India exits at the correction
✅ Bought the dip; +$1,788M; SLV alone +$1,953M
Data Source: Morningstar period-end cumulative flows (HS338–HS345) | Silver ETFs: SLV, SIVR, PHAG | Silver price in USD/oz
 
Phase 1 — While the West Was Walking Away, India Was Just Walking In
For nearly three years — from January 2022 to February 2025 — global institutional funds were quietly but steadily exiting silver ETFs. They pulled out over $4,056 million in total, month after month, averaging $107 million in outflows every single month. Silver wasn’t exciting to them anymore. Indian retail investors, however, were just discovering it. During the same period, they poured in $1,574.8 million — steadily, patiently, at roughly $41 million a month. They were buying what the world was selling. In hindsight, not a bad instinct — just early.
 
Phase 2 — A Brief Moment When Everyone Agreed From March to August 2025, something rare happened:
Indian and global investors were finally on the same side. As silver climbed from $33 to $39, global funds deployed $4,854 million in six months. Indian inflows surged to $206.8 million per month. Both camps were bullish, both were buying, and the trade was working. But global funds had a plan. Indian investors had momentum.

Phase 3 — The Divergence That Defined Everything Then silver went parabolic.
From September 2025 to January 2026, it surged 182% — from $42.50 to $120. This is where the story splits sharply. Global institutional funds used the euphoria to exit. They sold $3,550 million into the rally — methodically, without flinching, taking profits as retail crowds piled in. Indian investors, meanwhile, flooded in with $4,601.9 million in just five months — their largest buying spree ever — right at the top of the market. This is textbook FOMO: buying because prices are rising, not because value exists.

Phase 4 — The Correction Reveals the Truth February 2026.
Silver falls back to $81.58. Indian retail investors panicked and pulled out $100.6 million — selling at the very bottom of the correction. Global funds did the opposite. They bought $1,788 million in a single month, calmly accumulating as others fled. Global funds sold high and bought low. Indian retail investors bought high and sold low — the oldest and most painful mistake in investing. The Lesson This isn’t a story about silver. It’s a story about how information, patience, and discipline separate institutional capital from retail emotion. Markets will always offer inflection points — moments where the smart money pivots and the crowd follows too late. The $4.6 billion that Indian investors deployed at peak prices wasn’t a failure of intent. It was a failure of timing — driven by the most human of instincts: the fear of missing out. The best trades are rarely the loudest ones.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related Posts

euNetworks Appoints Ilex Content Strategies as PR Agency of Record Following Global Rebrand

The European connectivity provider selects Ilex to deliver strategic media relations that supports growth across international markets. London, UK, Feb…

UNCTAD – UN Trade and Development – Driving greener, more resilient ports

Geneva, Apr 22 – UN Trade and Development (UNCTAD) and the Maritime and Port Authority of Singapore (MPA) have launched…

BRICS Meet on MSME Ecosystem to Focus on Innovation and Global Growth

New Delhi, June 18: India will host a BRICS meeting on Friday aimed at developing a stronger and future-ready ecosystem…