Market Force-Silver
August 7, 2009
In this week’s missive I decided to take a clip from
the August issue of The Morgan Report and share with
readers what others have to say about the silver
market.
Begin excerpt…
As some of you know, I associate with many of the
well known and not so well known people in this
industry and sometimes forget that some of them are
as bullish as I about silver; one of them is Adrian
Douglas.
Adrian Douglas, the proprietor of
Market Force Analysis and also a director of
GATA (the Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee), did a
recent interview about the silver market, and he is
as bullish as we are, if not more so. Here are some
of the highlights of that interview.
The MFA for silver until recently was showing that
it was going to outperform gold, which it has. Right
now we’re at a point where the Market Force Analysis
has to bust through a particular resistance level,
and it’s right there at it, and it hasn’t broken
through, whereas gold has actually moved off and
started to show significant strengths.
▪ Silver
is way below its equilibrium price. From my
analysis, the equilibrium price right now for
silver is almost $16.00. And as the buying
interest increases, that equilibrium price moves
up. So the real price actually tries to chase
it.
▪ So
from that point of view, silver is ready to move
better and stronger than gold. It’s just having
a bit of headwind right now. Once it overcomes
that, I think we’ll see silver will outperform
gold quite dramatically.
▪ I
would say that it will probably start to
outperform gold before gold goes for 1000. I
think this bit of headwind is only very short
term. It may be over by the end of next week.
And so I don’t see it being a major lag on
silver for very long.
▪ There’s
very little left on the planet. The U.S.
Geological Society said just a couple years ago
that silver would be the first element in the
periodic table that would become extinct. It’s
incredibly bullish. The USGS said that would
happen by 2020. So if we’re in the situation
where we can run out of silver, the price
clearly has to go up, because you can’t
obviously run out of silver. What will happen
is, the price will have to go to a price level
where it’s economic to recycle it.
▪ We
recycle almost all the gold we use in any
industrial application, but we throw silver away
in our cell phone batteries and solder
connections and that sort of thing, in
landfills. So the price has to go to a price
probably close to the price of gold right now
for it to be economic to not throw another gram
of silver away in a landfill. We don’t throw any
gold away. And so I see silver probably
eventually reaching a price that is higher than
gold, based on the fact that it’s rarer than
gold right now because we’ve consumed it.
Editor’s comment:
Adrian is NOT the only one to make this type of
statement. Jerome Smith, author of Silver Profits in
the ’80s and several other books on silver and the
economy, thought gold and silver would trade at the
same price at some point. Personally, I want to let
the market speak and am looking for a ten to one
ratio where silver trades at 1/10 the price of gold
at the high. Regardless, silver has much stronger
fundamentals than even gold, but the market demand
for gold is stronger in dollar terms by far.
However, just a small shift in thinking and/or new
money can send silver very high, very fast.
▪ The
traditional ratio of 16 to 1 that you find is
fine while there’s still plenty of it around.
But as it starts to become extinct then silver
becomes very rare and will become rarer than
gold is. It’s difficult for us to get our minds
around it right now, but that’s what’s going to
happen.
▪ Look
what happened to rhodium two years ago; it went
from $300.00 to $10,000.00 an ounce, and most
people probably don’t even know that. It
certainly didn’t get on the front page of The
Wall Street Journal.
▪ But
that was a move that could be made in a metal
and not even make any news. So, you know, silver
can do something that’s a lot more dramatic.
Gold almost has no industrial applications; this
is what the bears throw at us that is negative
about gold: apparently it has no use. It has no
use that consumes it; its sole use essentially
is to store value. And that’s what it does
perfectly, and obviously does it very well,
because we still have pretty much all the gold
that’s ever been mined in history, and it is
still above ground somewhere.
▪ So
it’s perfectly stored well for 6000 years and
has never been consumed. So this notion that
there’s something negative about gold because it
has no industrial use is rubbish. It has one
use, which is to store value, which is why
governments hate it so much . . . if gold is
going up, there is only one reason it’s going
up, and that’s because people are using it to
store value.
▪ With
any other commodity that has more than one use,
like silver, like copper, like oil, you can
always point to, “Oh, the economy is recovering,
that’s why that quantity is going up.” But gold
you can’t make excuses for. So that’s why the
price is suppressed.
▪ Silver,
on the other hand, does have industrial uses
that compete with its use as a store of value.
The industrial use has been so big, compared to
investment demand, that it’s the industrial
application that has suppressed the price.
End of excerpt…
Adrian
Douglas had more to say however, this is sufficient
to give the reader something to ponder on the medium
to long term price potential of the silver market.
The potential of silver being depleted by 2020 is a
point I made at the February Silver Summit in
Phoenix Arizona. Perhaps some of you may think about
attending in 2010. One of the largest and best
Silver Summit’s is the original in Spokane
Washington see the Silver Summit for more details.
It is an honor to be.
Sincerely,
David Morgan
Mr. Morgan has followed the silver market for more
than thirty years. He wrote the book,
Get the Skinny on Silver Investing. Much of his
Web site,
Silver-Investor.com,
is devoted to education about the precious metals,
it is both a free site and does have a members only
section. To receive full access to
The Morgan Report click the hyperlink.
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