Gold Says Silver's Cheap
Ratio out of historical whack...
IN 2023 global silver production was approximately 26,000 metric
tons, writes Adam Sharp in Addison
Wiggin's Daily
Reckoning.
During the same period, gold production was around 3,000 tonnes.
So 8.6x more silver is mined
annually than gold. Yet gold trades at about 86x the price of silver today ($2633/oz for gold and
$30.60/oz for silver).
What explains this disconnect? The primary differentiator is the fact that central banks
buy and hold large quantities of
gold. Global central banks and governments hold approximately 36,700 tons, or roughly 17% of all gold
ever mined.
It doesn't really seem like that much – just 17%. But that percentage makes a world of
difference in markets. Even
single-digit moves in supply/demand can dramatically impact hard asset prices. When central banks hold
nearly a fifth of global supply
and are buying more, that matters greatly.
Gold remains a monetary asset today,
and I believe there's a good
chance we return to some version of the gold standard in the future.
Silver, on
the other hand, has lost its
monetary mojo (for now).
Yet historically, both gold and silver were money.
Take a look at this infographic
which shows the gold/silver ratio at various points in history.

As you can see, the historical
ratios were more proportional
to the relative scarcity of these precious metals in the ground (roughly 1:8 today).
For much of history,
gold was used for large purchases such as real estate, and silver for everyday expenses. Even up until
1964 in the US, silver was an
important part of our coinage.
I believe that eventually, silver will also
re-emerge as a personal monetary
asset. Individual investors will catch on that we're headed for a financial reset.
They will want to put
their money into something analog. A hard asset that can't be hacked.
But some
people want something with
more upside than gold, while still offering the safety of precious metals.
Silver fits the bill
beautifully.
Today, demand for silver is once again booming, but not for
monetary purposes (yet).
As we can see in the latest Silver Institute report, physical investment demand for silver
is currently
dropping.
Physical investment is forecast to fall by 15% to a four-year low of
208Moz in 2024. Losses have
been concentrating in the US where coin and bar sales are on track for a 40% decline to its lowest level
since 2019. This reflects an
absence of new crises during 2024-to-date, which has affected precious metal retail investment across
the board.
Industrial demand, however, is still soaring. In 2024 industrial buying is set to rise 7%,
primarily driven by solar
panel growth in China.
ETF demand is also rising, reflecting growing investor
interest in that area. It's set
to rise 8% vs 2023, the first inflow in years. This is a good sign.
Overall
silver is running record annual
deficits, and this is expected to continue.
When physical silver investment
turns the corner, I expect
fireworks. With industrial demand so high, it only takes a little growth from investment demand to send
the metal much
higher.
When it comes to silver investment demand, the strongest catalyst is
financial or monetary chaos.
Things like sustained inflation, banking crisis, sovereign default.
I am
certain that the world won't lack
for crises as this decade proceeds. Governments around the globe have reached a tipping point of debt
and deficit.
Banks have massive unrealized losses in their fixed-income portfolios, which everyone is
essentially ignoring. Interest
rates are rising despite Fed rate cuts, exacerbating the losses.
The US is
about to dramatically change its
foreign trade policies, which is certain to be a disruptive force. In the long run, tariffs will
encourage domestic production and
raise wages, but in the short term, there will be side effects.
Silver
performed remarkably well during the
first inflation wave over the past few years. In 2020, silver bottomed out at around $11.60. Today it
trades at $30.60, down from a
recent high of nearly $35.
The current correction offers a nice buying
opportunity, but there's a chance we
go lower. If we do, I plan on buying aggressively.











Email
us