Silver as an Investment (Part 1 of 3)

April 17, 2010

Uncategorized

Silver, like other precious metals, may be used as an investment. For more than four thousand years, silver has been regarded as a form of money and store of value. However, since the end of the silver standard, silver has lost its role as legal tender in the United States. (It continued to be used in dimes and quarter dollars until 1964, and half dollars until 1970 when the intrinsic value of the silver overtook the coins’ face values.)

Silver price

The price of silver has been notoriously volatile as it can fluctuate between industrial and store of value demands. At times this can cause wide ranging valuations in the market, creating volatility.

Silver often tracks the gold price due to store of value demands, although the ratio can vary. The gold/silver ratio is often analyzed by traders, investors and buyers. In 1792, the gold/silver ratio was fixed by law in the United States at 1:15, which meant that one troy ounce of gold would buy 15 troy ounces of silver; a ratio of 1:15.5 was enacted in France in 1803. The average gold/silver ratio during the 20th century, however, was 1:47. The lower the ratio/number;  the more expensive silver is compared to gold. Conversely,  the higher the ratio/number, the cheaper silver is compared to gold. Currently with spot gold at $1136.80/oz and spot silver at $17.70/oz the gold/silver ratio is at 1:64.3. So according to historical facts, silver is currently a bargain.

From September 2005 onwards, the price of silver has risen fairly steeply, being initially around $7 per troy ounce,  but reaching $14 per oz for the first time by late April 2006. The monthly average price of silver was $12.61 per troy ounce during April 2006, and the spot price was around $15.78 per troy ounce on November 6, 2007. As of March 2008, it hovered around $20 per troy ounce. However, the price of silver plummeted 58% in October 2008, along with other metals and commodities, due to the effects of the credit crunch. It has recovered since then, but has yet to surpass its pre-credit, crunch high of $20.92 per oz.

Factors influencing the silver price

Private and institutional investors
  • From 1973 the Hunt brothers began cornering the market in silver, helping to cause a spike in 1980 of $49.45 per troy ounce and a reduction of the gold/silver ratio down to 1:17.0 (gold also peaked in 1980, at $850 per troy ounce). In the last nine months of 1979, the brothers were estimated to be holding over 100 million troy ounces of silver and several large silver futures contracts. However, a combination of changed trading rules on the New York Mercantile Exchange (NYMEX) and the intervention of the Federal Reserve put an end to the game.
  • In 1997, Warren Buffett purchased 130 million troy ounces (4,000 metric tons) of silver at approximately $4.50 per troy ounce (total value $585 million). On May 6, 2006, Buffett announced to shareholders that his company no longer held any silver.
  • In April 2006 iShares launched a silver exchange-traded fund, called the iShares Silver Trust (NYSE: SLV), which as of April 2008 held 180 million troy ounces of silver as reserves. 
The large concentrated short position

The CFTC publishes a weekly Commitments of Traders Report which shows that the four or fewer largest traders are holding 90% of all short silver contracts. Furthermore, these four or fewer traders were short a total of 245 million troy ounces (as of April 2007), which is equivalent to 140 days of production. According to Ted Butler, one of these banks with large silver shorts, JP Morgan Chase, is also the custodian of the SLV silver ETF. Some silver analysis has pointed to a potential conflict of interest, as close scrutiny of Comex documents reveals that ETF shares may be used to ‘cover’ Comex physical metal deliveries. This leads analysts to speculate that some stores of silver have multiple claims upon them.

Industrial demand

The use of silver in items such as electrical appliances and medical products has increased since 2001. New applications for silver are being explored in batteries, superconductors and microcircuits, which may further increase non-investment demand. The expansion of the middle classes in emerging economies aspiring to Western lifestyles and products may also contribute to a long-term rise in industrial usage. Even so, due to the advent of digital cameras the enormous reduction in the use of silver halide-based photographic film has tended to offset this in the short term.

References

The Coinage Act of April 2, 1792
The ratio gold silver from 1800-1900
Evolution of the ratio production and the price of the gold and the silver since 1900.
H.L. Hunt and the Circle K Cowboys
Wikipedia
 

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One Response to “Silver as an Investment (Part 1 of 3)”

  1. June Says:

    The motivation to buy gold is usually driven by the pursuit of some defensive financial technique.

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