The Analyst Who Called the 1987 Crash and Silver Hitting $100 now Sees It Tripling From Here
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The Analyst Who Called the 1987 Crash and Silver Hitting $100 now Sees It Tripling From Here
"A Wall Street veteran since 1975, Oliver founded Momentum Structural Analysis in 1992 for institutional investor clients, finally opening subscriptions for individual investors in 2015. His proprietary method of calculating prices on commodities, equities, and other market trading sectors into a momentum oscillator gives him indications of market energy building and decaying long before other technical pricing methodologies begin to indicate trends."
"Oliver successfully predicted the 1987 crash and anticipated both silver's astonishing 2025 bull run, as well as the subsequent pull back retracing of January 2026. However, his momentum indicators are forecasting another bull run that can reach between $300 and $500 per ounce in 2026, by possibly sometime this summer. He gave a number of reasons, many of which have already occurred, but not previously explained within the scope of his momentum analytical methodology:"
"The change in the silver-to-gold ratio was Oliver's first breakout signal. 2024 saw silver prices at 1% of gold prices. By spring 2025, that ratio doubled to 2%. Historic silver/gold ratio peaks include rises to 6.5% in 1980 and to 3.1% in 2011. If gold continues, as many anticipate, to $8,000 oz., a 3%-6% ratio for silver would price it between $240 to $500. This is based on past gold bull runs, which went up 8-fold in both 1980 and in 2011."
Michael Oliver founded Momentum Structural Analysis and uses a proprietary momentum oscillator to gauge market energy for commodities and equities. Oliver predicted the 1987 crash and anticipated silver's 2025 bull run plus the January 2026 retracement. His current momentum indicators signal another potential silver bull run in 2026, possibly reaching $300–$500 per ounce. A key signal was the silver-to-gold ratio rising from 1% in 2024 to 2% in spring 2025, with historical peaks at 6.5% (1980) and 3.1% (2011). If gold reaches $8,000/oz, a 3%–6% ratio implies silver between $240 and $500.
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