I believe that silver could go to $60 per ounce from today’s price
of just $30 by the end of 2014. That would be double from today’s
current prices in just a little over two years! I also believe silver
will be the best single investment of this decade. The following
article is focused on why I think that you should seriously consider
having a significant percentage of your investment portfolio in silver.
Many gold investors deride silver as the "poor man's gold" because
of its low relative price to gold. They also don't like the fact that
it because it is used primarily as an industrial metal it can be
negatively affected by a cyclical downturn in the economy. This is
opposite of gold which is viewed almost entirely as a precious metal.
Many years ago, the silver market was so oversupplied because there
were huge artificial inventories of silver. This was because the US
took currency (coins) out of circulation due to its physical silver
content. Because of this artificial situation, huge surpluses hung over
the market until these excess inventories were depleted. This led to
silver prices crashing as low as $2 and then traded around $5 for
years. Because silver had so decoupled from the price of gold during
this period, it began to be thought of as just another industrial metal
and not a precious metal.
There are still skeptics who think of silver as just another
industrial metal. However after a 600% rise in price from $5 to $30
since 2003, it has begun again to be viewed as a precious metal. I
think that silver has only completed about fifty percent of that
process. As this transformation continues there will be additional
significant moves higher in price. That will attract more investors to
silver again until it once again retains its true status as a precious
metal.
1) The amount of silver consumed annually and bought for investment
exceeds currently exceeds total annual mining output and has for years.
That gap has been filled by sellers willing to sell from existing
inventories and as prices rise. As time passes this will naturally push
prices significantly higher until this fundamental imbalance reaches a
true equilibrium price where supply is closer to demand.
2) Both industrial and investment demand for silver is growing in
excess of the annual increase in mining production growth. The
available inventory is low and will get even tighter over time. These
two factors will lead to a continued tighter supply-demand situation
going forward.
3) The lower price of silver at $32 appeals more broadly to small
investors relative to the more expensive gold at $1705, especially if
gold prices continue to rise.
4) Most silver is not found in mining sites in any significant
concentrated form. It is usually chemically bound to other metals; much
of it is actually the byproduct of mining for lead, copper, etc. In
the last few decades this made it less attractive from a profitability
standpoint to invest in pure silver mine. Now prices have finally
recovered enough to make new projects feasible again. So there is new
investment in the sector but it is a lengthy multi-year process to
bring on significant new production. .
5) The last time silver was found in huge concentrations or veins
that dramatically affected the amount available and therefore
significantly lowered prices was in the Comstock Lode in Nevada in the
late 1800's. The Comstock Lode produced tons of ore that was very pure
with concentrations of 25-50% silver. Silver mines today have much
lower concentrations, usually always less than two ounces per ton of
refined ore.
6) Silver is the most conductive metal on earth. Gold is also
conductive but is prohibitively expensive due to its much higher price
for most industrial uses compared to silver.
7) Silver is an industrial metal with over 10,000 commercial
applications. Because it is one of the best electrical and thermal
conductors, that makes it ideal for electrical uses such as switches,
multi-layer ceramic capacitors, conductive adhesives, and contacts. It
is used in some brazing and soldering as well. Silver is also used in
solar cells, heated automobile wind shields, DVD's and some mirrors.
8) Silver is an essential element in the electronic gadgets that are
a growing part of our digital age. It is in every cell phone, smart
phone, tablet, computer keyboard, solar cells and every radio frequency
if ID device (RFID). This makes it an essential element going
forward as the world becomes more addicted to gadgets. The growth and
rising living standards of people in the emerging economies will drive
long-term growth of new customers that will demand more and more
electronic gadgets.
9) Silver's industrial demand should increase 60% to 666 million
ounces per year by 2016 from 487 million ounces in 2010. Current annual
mine production is only around 700 million ounces per year growing a
few percent annually.
10) Of a total of fifty billion ounces of silver that have been
mined in history, only two ounces (estimate) or 5% remain in above
ground inventories available to be bought and sold. This is due to
silver being used up in industrial applications in very small
quantities, which makes it unprofitable to recycle at today's prices. A
lot of silver is used in minute quantities in industrial products
which are used up and discarded without being recycled.
11) This is unlike gold where five billion ounces have been mined
and two and half billion ounces (estimate) are still available in all
inventory. Since gold is hardly ever discarded because of its very high
price, used mainly in jewelry or for investment purposes, the total
inventory is so much larger than silver.
12) The supply demand equilibrium in silver is extremely tight.
There is now less than one year of inventory of silver, compared to
over eleven years of inventory in the 1970’s.
13) Exchange Traded Funds (mainly SLV, SGOL, PSLV, and CEF) have
opened precious metals investing in silver to millions of investors
around the globe. When investor make net new purchases, the ETF
purchases physical silver and removes it from the available market,
which increases the scarcity of available supply. This is the first time
many investors worldwide are not required to actually buy physical
silver bullion and coins and store it themselves. Now they have an
investment vehicle that offers liquidity and ease of trading to get
exposure to precious metals.
14) Silver also has many medicinal applications. Roman soldiers long
ago noticed that if water is kept in silver cups, it wouldn’t become
stagnant. Today silver in "colloidal" form is used as a broad spectrum
antibiotic. It can be used in bandages to treat burn victim's wounds
and also in colloidal form actually swallowed to target microorganisms
in one's gut. It is also used in water purification systems.
15) The US Dollar has lost 31% of its purchasing power just since
2000. The dollar has lost a staggering 82% of its value since the US
was taken off the gold standard in 1971. Since the Federal Reserve was
created in 1913, the US dollar has lost 95.6% of its purchasing power.
When you compare the historical appreciation and more importantly, the
retention of real purchasing power of precious metals versus the dollar
in those same time frames, those facts alone should convince you that
significant exposure in precious metals is necessary to protect your
wealth. The primary and overarching reason you should have a
significant percentage of your investment assets in precious metals is
simple: to protect the real purchasing power of your accumulated
wealth! In this age of government's abusing their privilege of
excessively printing currency, on a magnitude and scale not seen for
decades, only gold and silver can protect and actually grow your
wealth.
16) Gold and silver are such unique elements with so many uncommon
properties. Therefore the chance of a gold or silver substitute being
developed is almost impossible. It hasn't happened in thousands of
years and it probably never will. That is what makes them exclusive;
they can't be printed, manufactured or copied. They can only be mined,
purchased from a willing seller of the world's existing inventory and
from recycling.
17) Unlike an account at a bank, a dollar bill or a bond, these are
all both an asset and liability to counterparty. This includes every
other financial instrument and derivative man has created in history.
Precious metals are the only asset class with no counterparty risk if
you have physical or very secure possession. They will always retain
some value and can’t go to zero like any other investment.
18) The total amount of silver available to trade in the physical
silver market is only about $70 billion versus the total gold market
which now exceeds $4.3 trillion. As you can see from these numbers, the
total market size of the silver market is only 1.6% of the size of the
entire gold market. This lack of liquidity and use of extreme leverage
in its respective futures market produces wild volatility in price
fluctuations of silver.
19) The total gold market is sixty one times the size of the silver
market yet. As interest in silver increases this sets up a situation
where prices could soar higher.
20) Since World War II, the US government has sold over five billion
ounces of silver and currently has no reported stores. Now that vast
stockpiles are gone, the supply demand equation has changed
dramatically.
*Post courtesy of Mark Thomas, the Silver Price Advisor.
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ReplyDeleteSILVER (5 MAR.) TREND: CONSOLIDATE
RES 1: 46250
RES 2: 46500
SUPP 1: 45200
SUPP 2: 44700
STRATEGY: BUY ON DIPS
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