The post Robert Kiyosaki Buys Silver Eagles as Market Cools After Rally appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News
Silver is currently trading between $81.30 and $81.60 per ounce after a volatile start to the month, with prices slipping about 2% as traders take profits. Investor Robert Kiyosaki is involved as a buyer, revealing he purchased 600 American Silver Eagles near $82. The situation matters because analysts and investors are debating whether the recent pullback is temporary before a larger move higher.
After a sharp rally earlier this month, silver has moved into a consolidation range. Prices are hovering between $81.30 and $81.60, showing a mild pullback as traders lock in gains.
The metal is now trying to form a stable base. Resistance is seen near $83.10, while strong support is building around $79.
Despite the short-term decline, overall sentiment remains neutral to slightly bullish. Many traders are watching the $77–$78 zone as a possible dip-buying area, especially if the U.S. dollar weakens. Some expect a rebound toward the low $90s if momentum returns.
During the recent cooling in prices, Rich Dad Poor Dad author Robert Kiyosaki said he bought 600 American Silver Eagles at roughly $82 per ounce.
He repeated his long-held view that silver is undervalued and said the recent dip did not change his outlook. Kiyosaki believes silver could reach $200 per ounce or more by 2026.
He sees silver as protection against risks to the U.S. dollar, pointing to rising government debt and continued money creation as reasons investors may turn to hard assets.
Independent analyst NoLimit argues that current silver prices do not fully reflect real physical market conditions.
According to him, futures and paper contracts are keeping prices lower even as industrial demand grows and physical inventories become tighter. He describes the current period as a phase where large paper positions are influencing price movements.
NoLimit believes this imbalance could eventually be corrected, which may push prices higher if short positions are covered.
Another analyst, Silver Knight, focuses on China’s role in the silver market. He argues that China may prefer lower or stable prices because it uses large amounts of silver in manufacturing.
Silver is widely used in solar panels, electric vehicles, and electronics. A rapid rise in prices would increase production costs, so keeping prices stable supports industrial margins.
Analysts say hedging and institutional positioning may be helping limit major price spikes despite rising demand.
NoLimit and Silver Knight both point to the growing gap between gold and silver prices. They believe larger players may be positioning for gold to move first while silver remains capped for now.
Kiyosaki disagrees that this situation will last. He believes that once gold rises, silver could move faster because the market is smaller and supply is tighter.
In his view, that shift could trigger the kind of breakout long-term silver investors have been waiting for.


