Last week
in my first column for
International Business Times, I
addressed the theoretical price
of gold in U.S. dollar terms.
This is a straightforward
calculation based upon the M1
currency supply and the amount
of gold the Treasury of the
United States claims it owns.
Naturally, putting your neck
out for a gold price leads to the next logical
question and that is, “What price will silver reach
at its high point?” This question is much more
difficult to answer, because silver is not
considered to be money in any government’s monetary
base, either officially or unofficially.
Let me digress here for a
moment. Many central banks worldwide still own gold.
Yes, most have sold gold for paper the past several
years, but they do consider it to be a monetary
asset nonetheless. Additionally, some governments
are actually increasing their gold holdings, so it
is factually correct to place gold into the monetary
aggregate base.
This is not true of silver;
both the Chinese and Indian governments hold
pitifully small amounts of silver in inventory, but
for all practical purposes, all governmental silver
holdings are depleted. Yet silver has been used as
money more often, in more places, and for longer
periods of time than even gold. This is difficult
for most Western readers to absorb, yet as Milton
Friedman said in 1993,
"The major monetary metal in history is
silver, not gold."
Coming back to forecasting the
price of silver, we need to define a methodology.
One way is to use what I call the classic, or
monetary, ratio. This is based upon a bimetallic
standard, which was exercised when both gold and
silver were used daily as money. The ratio was fixed
between 15-16 to 1. In other words, one ounce of
gold bought 16 ounces of silver. If we use our gold
price of $2900 derived in last week's column, and
divide by 16, that puts silver at $181.25 per ounce.
Is this possible? Under our
current financial conditions I am reluctant to rule
out anything, but I am also a practical investor.
Before we ever get to even $100, which I have
forecast as a price I do expect silver to achieve,
we must move above $30, then $40, and take out the
old nominal high of $50. I think you see my point,
and the ultimate high price is impossible to
determine, because only the market knows. But in my
view, silver has way too many things going for it
not to continue higher over the next several years.
Consider the following points:
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