This pretty well makes clear that
global silver inventories have evaporated and it is simply impossible to bring
on much in the way of new production anytime soon. There will likely be an increase of scrap out
of India
as prices rise, but that is the only give out there.
As posted a year ago, silver is
heading for a price blow off that is able to pass over the $100 dollar
mark. This now looks like we have reached
the crisis point. Silver is now grinding
through the $35.00 mark and I am hearing of the short position paying as much
as $80.00 for delivery.
Read the second article and
interpret as you like.
The real problem is that silver
is the one metal after gold that investors are prepared to simply own. It may
not really be rational but it has placed thousands of tons of gold away into private
hoarding hands and it can easily do exactly the same thing with silver, causing
silver to be marked to gold on an agreed upon ration such as the much touted
ten silver to one gold. That gives us a price target of $145 per
ounce.
The Most Compelling Argument for Owning Silver I've Ever Heard
Feb 26, 2011 - 04:09 PM
By: DailyWealth
Sean Goldsmith writes: The talk of the investment industry is a
video making its way around the internet right now…
And no… it's not the popular "End of America" video I'm sure you've seen.
The video is footage of expert resource investor Eric Sprott of Sprott
Resources discussing precious metals at Casey Research's excellent Gold &
Resource Summit
late last year. If you're interested at all in precious metals, Casey's work is
a "must-read," and this video is a must-watch.
Eric Sprott is one of the world's best investors… probably the best investor you've never heard of. He specializes in natural resources, and he's a big precious metals bull. He holds 70%-80% of his fund in gold and silver (he says silver is his largest holding). In the video, Sprott makes the most compelling argument to buy silver I've ever heard…
In short, the world is out of silver. Sprott says aggregate investment demand for silver between 2000 and 2009 was 293.8 million ounces (according to the GFMS, the world's foremost precious metals consultancy).
Using his own numbers, Sprott compiled the silver holdings for seven large investors, including himself, iShares Silver Trust, ZKB, GoldMoney, and so on. Just those seven entities own 519.6 million ounces of silver… That's 225.8 million missing ounces. And again… that's only seven investors. It doesn't include central banks, individuals, hedge funds, etc.
It's obvious, as Sprott notes, silver data has been "very, very misstated." Sprott ends his speech saying, "There's $22 billion of silver available in the world, of which the ETFs already own half... and between you guys and us, we probably own the other half... which means there's nothing left."
Sprott's comments remind me of a conversation I had with a friend this week… My friend is one of the largest gold and silver coin dealers in the country. He said he hopes silver retreats, because the coins are going crazy. "People have no idea how small the market is," he said. "I've seen prices jump 10% in the last week."
Sprott's argument only takes the investment demand for silver into account. And while investors do hoard silver, more than 95% of today's demand for silver comes from industry. And when that silver is consumed, it's gone forever. Silver's current production is just enough to meet the industrial demand. In other words, there is virtually zero new silver available for investment purposes.
The
But for the first time in decades, people are viewing silver as a
monetary asset again. And when silver's viewed as money, the ratio contracts.
Will we return to the 18th century ratio of 15:1? Probably not. Even if silver
doubled while gold went nowhere, the ratio would still only be 22:1.
We've been asking readers to buy gold and silver for a decade. And if you haven't already bought, it's not too late. Yes, precious metals are more popular than they were a few years ago, but we're far from a top. If you bring up your bullion holdings in conversation with a table of friends, you probably won't get the weird looks you would have years ago… But you'll still be alone in your ownership.
Don't speculate on gold and silver prices. Gold is money. Silver is money. Buy them as a form of savings, setting aside a chunk of cash each month just for bullion. Store your bullion somewhere safe (like self storage). And leave it.
Before you realize it, you'll have considerable wealth in precious metals. And as Eric Sprott has outlined, you'll likely see a huge increase in value when the world wakes up and realizes we're out of silver.
A Conspiracy With a Silver Lining
March 2, 2011, 7:40 PM
As Americans know all too well by this point, commodity prices — for
corn, wheat, soybeans, crude oil, gold and even farmland — have been going
through the roof for what seems like forever. There are many causes, primarily
supply and demand pressures driven by fears about the unrest in the Middle
East, the rise of consumerism in China
and India ,
and the Fed’s $600 billion campaign to increase the money supply.
Nonetheless, how to explain the price of silver? In the past six
months, the value of the precious metal has increased nearly 80 percent, to
more than $34 an ounce from around $19 an ounce. In the last month alone, its
price has increased nearly 23 percent. This kind of price action in the silver
market is reminiscent of the fortune-busting, roller-coaster ride enjoyed by
the Hunt Brothers, Nelson Bunker and William Herbert, back in 1970s and early
1980s when they tried unsuccessfully to corner the market. When the Hunts
started buying silver in 1973, the price of the metal was $1.95 an ounce. By
early 1980, the brothers had driven the price up to $54 an ounce before the
Federal Reserve intervened, changed the rules on speculative silver investments
and the price plunged. The brothers later declared bankruptcy.
Accusations that JPMorganChase and HSBC allegedly manipulated precious
metal markets are worth looking into.
The Hunts may be gone from the market, but there are still plenty of
people suspicious about the trading in silver, and now they have the Web to
explore and to expand their conspiracy narratives. This time around — according
to bloggers and commenters on sites with names like Silverseek, 321Gold and
Seeking Alpha — silver shot up in price after a whistleblower exposed an
alleged conspiracy to keep the price artificially low despite the inflationary
pressure of the Fed’s cheap money policy. (Some even suspect that the Fed
itself was behind the effort to keep silver prices low, as a way to keep the
dollar’s value artificially high.) Trying to unravel the mysterious rise in
silver’s price is a conspiracy theorist’s dream, replete with powerful bankers,
informants, suspicious car accidents and a now a squeeze on short sellers. Most
intriguingly, however, much of the speculation seems highly plausible.
The gist goes something like this: When JPMorgan Chase bought Bear
Stearns in March 2008, it inherited Bear Stearns’ large bet that the price of
silver would fall. Over time, it added to that bet, and then the international
bank HSBC got into the market heavily on the bear side as well. These actions
“artificially depressed the price of silver dramatically downward,”according to a class-action lawsuit initiated by a Florida futures
trader and filed against both banks in November in federal court in
the Southern District of New York.
“The conspiracy and scheme was enormously successful, netting the
defendants substantial illegal profits” in the billions of dollars between June
2008 and March 2010, according to the suit. The suit claims that JPMorgan and
HSBC together “controlled over 85 percent the commercial net short positions”
in silvers futures contracts at Comex, a Chicago-based exchange on which silver
is traded, along with “25 percent of all open interest short positions” and a
“a market share in excess of 9o percent of all precious metals derivative
contracts, excluding gold.”
In the United States, trading in precious metals and other commodities
is regulated and closely monitored by a federal agency, the Commodity Futures
Trading Commission. In September 2008, after receiving hundreds of complaints
that silver future prices were being manipulated downward by JPMorgan and HSBC,
the commission’s enforcement division started an investigation. In November
2009, an informant, described in the law suit only as a former employee of
Goldman Sachs and a 40-year industry veteran, approached the commission with
tales of how the silver traders at JPMorgan were bragging about all the money
they were making “as a result of the manipulation,” which entailed “flooding
the market” with “short positions” every time the price of silver started to
creep upward. The idea was that by unloading its short positions like a
time-released capsule, JPMorgan’s traders were keeping the price of silver
artificially low.
Soon enough, the informant was identified as Andrew Maguire, an
independent precious metals trader in London .
On Jan. 26, 2010, Maguire sent Bart Chilton, a member of the futures trading
commission, an e-mail urging him to look into the silver trading that day. “It
was a good example of how a single seller, when they hold such a concentrated
position in the very small silver market can instigate a sell off at will,”
Maguire wrote.
On Feb. 3, 2010, Maguire gave the futures trading commission word about
an impending “manipulation event” that he said would occur two days later, when
the Labor Department’s non-farm payroll numbers would be released. He then
spelled out two trading scenarios about which he had been told. “Both scenarios
will spell an attempt by the two main short holders” — JPMorganChase and HSBC —
“to illegally drive the market down and reap very large profits,” Maguire wrote
in an e-mail to a trading-commission investigator.
On Feb. 5, Maguire took a victory lap, writing in another e-mail to the
trading commission that “silver manipulation was a great success and played out
EXACTLY to plan as predicted.” He added, “I hope you took note of how and who
added the short sales (I certainly have a copy) and I am certain you will find
it is the same concentrated shorts who have been in full control since JPM took
over the Bear Stearns position … I feel sorry for all those not in this loop. A
serious amount of money was made and lost today and in my opinion as a result
of the CFTC’s allowing by your own definition an illegal concentrated and
manipulative position to continue.”
In March 2010, Maguire released his e-mails publicly, in part because
he felt the trading commission’s enforcement arm was not taking swift enough
action. He was also unhappy over not being invited to a commission hearing on
position limits scheduled for March 25. Then came the cloak and dagger element:
the day after the hearing, Maguire was involved in a bizarre car accident in London. As he
was at a gas station, a car came out of a side street and barreled into his car
and two others; London
police, using helicopters and chase cars, eventually nabbed the hit-and-run
driver. Reports that the perpetrator was given a slap on the wrist inflamed the
online crowds that had become captivated by Maguire’s odd story.
In any case, the class-action lawsuit contends that between March 2010
and November 2010, JPMorgan Chase and HSBC reduced their short positions in the
silver market by 30 percent, causing the metal’s price to rise dramatically,
but leaving them still with a large short position. Now, with the value of
silver rising nearly every day, the two banks are caught in a “massive short squeeze,”
according to one market participant, that appears to be costing them the
billions they made originally plus billions more. Whether these huge losses
will show up on the books of JPMorgan Chase and HSBC remains to be seen.
(Parsing through the publicly filed footnotes of derivative trades is no easy
task.)
Nonetheless, the conspiracy-minded have claimed that the Fed must have
somehow agreed to make JPMorgan and HSBC whole for any losses the banks
suffered if and when the price of silver rose above the artificially maintained
low levels — as in right now, for instance. (About all this, a JPMorganChase
spokesman declined to comment.)
Some two-and-a-half years later, the Commodity Futures Trading
Commission’s investigation is still unresolved, and at least one commissioner —
Bart Chilton — thinks that after interviewing more than 32 people and reviewing
more than 40,000 documents, there has been enough investigating and not enough
prosecuting. “More than two years ago, the agency began an investigation into
silver markets,” Chilton said at a commission hearing last October. “I have
been urging the agency to say something on the matter for months … I believe
violations to the Commodity Exchange Act have taken place in silver markets and
that any such violation of the law in this regard should be prosecuted.”
What’s more, Chilton said in an interview last week, that “one
participant” in the silver market still controlled 35 percent of the silver
market as recently as a few months ago, “enough to move prices,” he said, and
well above the 10 percent “position limits” the commission has proposed to
comply with Dodd-Frank financial reform law. Since that law’s passage last
summer, the commodities exchanges have issued waivers permitting the ownership
of silver positions above the limits the C.F.T.C. has proposed, and which were
supposed to be in place by January of this year. Yet the waivers remain in
place, and the big traders have not been penalized, much to Chilton’s
frustration And the mystery deepens: last Thursday, the price of silver fell
$1.50 per ounce in less than an hour before recovering. “This was robbery at
its most obvious and most vindictive,” wrote Richard Guthrie, a London-based
trader, in an e-mail to Chilton. “How many investors lost money and positions
to the financial benefit of an elite few?”
It’s getting harder and harder to continue to brush off Andrew
Maguire’s claims as the rantings of a rogue trader with a nutty online
following. The Commodities Futures Trading Commission should immediately
release the files from its investigation into the supposed manipulation of the
silver market so the public can determine whether JPMorganChase and HSBC did
anything illegal, with or without the help of the Fed. In addition, the
commission should start enforcing the 10 percent threshold on silver positions
it has proposed to comply with Dodd-Frank law. Basically, the other
commissioners must join with Bart Chilton to do the job they are required to
do: Protecting the sanctity of the markets and preventing the sorts of
manipulation we’ve seen all too often.
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