Like Cocoa, Love Silver
Can 'poor man's gold' make you rich...?
The SILVER spot price peaked above $29 on April 12, and it's pulled back
a bit. But that's no big deal,
writes Byron King in Addison Wiggin's Daily
Reckoning.
Like the rising gold price, which is over $2300 per
ounce, it looks like there's
more yet to come. In other words, precious metals are rapidly repricing.
Right
away, this tells me that Wall
Street and the City of London have lost control over the price for gold and silver. From all
appearances, pricing power has shifted
East to India, China and other BRICS nations that now dominate physical purchases.
If you bought gold or
silver during the past decade, you must feel pretty good right now. The price is up, and apparently
heading higher.
So today, let's discuss silver and a looming, much larger price jump than what we've
already seen.
But first, cocoa! Like chocolate, it has recently melted up and exploded.
Could this also happen
with silver? Begin with the one-year cocoa chart:

This chart covers June of last year to the present.
It shows over a triple in price for cocoa, with the big move from $4,000 to $10,000 per tonne coming in
the past two
months.
(By way of comparison, if this kind of price move happened with silver,
we'd see the metal at over
$80 per ounce; but this gets ahead of the story).
Is this situation with cocoa
normal? Do massive price moves
occur routinely in the cocoa space? No, and this is kind of weird.
Indeed, the
current cocoa price has
rapidly climbed to a historic high. It's unprecedented and here's a chart for the past 25 years to prove
it:

Sure, over the
years, cocoa has had ups and downs, but never an upward blowout like we see recently. This is definitely
different, so what's going
on?
First, it's basic economics 101. There's a cocoa supply issue because of
dry weather across equatorial
regions of the world where people grow the crop. Per the map below, these areas range from East Asia to
West Africa, and to the
Caribbean and Central/South America.

There's no need to
delve into meteorology or
climate issues. Just think in terms of not enough water or soil moisture to nurture the cocoa trees in
key producing nations. Then
consider dry conditions and many uncontrolled wildfires. Hence, a much smaller crop.
The long and short is
that the world's overall cocoa crop has fallen this past year. The problem cannot even begin to improve
until next year and the next
harvest season (with more rain along the way, growers hope).
Meanwhile on the
demand side, people across the
world love their chocolate. Many people across the world enjoy the taste of chocolate, and it's no
stretch to regard this kind of
confection as a poor man's luxury, hence it enjoys a strong global market.
In
addition, market momentum has
been a major factor pushing cocoa higher. This speculative component alone can exaggerate price
moves.
And
just as with gold, the cocoa phenomenon may be a signal that price discovery is moving away from Western
hands, towards the
East.
To sum up, the recent rise in cocoa price reflects a serious supply
shortfall, rising demand, the need
for new investment which will require time, and a sense of momentum as people watch the price levitate.
All that in the face of a
world where the very idea of price discovery is rebooting towards the East, away from traditional
Western markets and trading
pits.
Silver isn't chocolate, but it has long been called "the poor man's
gold". And silver is both an
industrial and monetary metal.
There's an ancient pedigree to silver as money.
It's deep in the
archaeological record. People write books about the history of silver as money (and on that point, I
recommend The Story of Silver:
How the White Metal Shaped America and the Modern World, William Silber, 2019).
First, let's look at the
silver price over the past 20 years:

Note the huge run-up
and back down in price,
2011-13; at one point silver was well over $40 per ounce (nearly $50 in 2011). Then, the metal traded in
the mid-teens doldrums for a
few years, 2014-2020.
And after a jump in 2020 (related to Covid panic buying),
silver's price support was
range-bound in the low $20s for the past few years.
Now, over those same 20
years, let's also compare the
continuous contract price for gold and silver:

Per the chart, silver and gold tracked closely
through 2011-13; they both moved up and down pretty well in tandem. For the past decade, though, since
2014 silver has lagged gold,
despite a strong run-up at one point in 2020 (the Covid panic-buy).
For our
purposes, silver has traded in a
range in the past couple of years, and shows legacy weakness relative to gold, with an expanding gap
even now. But can this change?
Can silver pull off a "slingshot" effect and deliver strong gains?
Think like a
cocoa trader for a moment. In
terms of demand, silver is popular in ways that are sticky, if not inelastic.
Begin with the monetary angle
despite the fact that silver is no longer used in the world's currencies; it's absent from US coinage,
for example, since a law in
1965 that took silver out of circulation.
But across the world, individuals,
businesses, and governments
(China and India come to mind) still buy silver, including old coins and definitely raw silver bullion.
Silver-stacking is a worldwide
phenomenon.
Meanwhile, silver is a crucial industrial metal; a key to every
imaginable kind of electronics
and absolutely necessary in the fast-growing sector of solar power. All this, and silver has growing
uses in fields ranging from water
purification to medical products like antiseptic bandages.
Thus, its demand is
solid and growing.
As for supply, statistics from the global Silver Institute show that global silver output
from mines is basically flat,
if not declining. Countries like Mexico, Peru and China struggle just to maintain production at levels
of previous years. Large
silver-producing companies like Fresnillo, Newmont, Glencore and more show declining
numbers.
Thus, it's not
far-fetched to say that the world may be at "peak silver" just now.
And yes, of
course, we have exploration
plays for silver out there, and more than a few strong developers. I follow the mining space and I've
seen and visited many great,
promising companies.
But as with cocoa, these silver plays aren't turnkey
operations. All will require time
for new silver deposits to see the light of day; time plus immense levels of capital to build mines,
mills and related
infrastructure.
Oh, and to find and train a new workforce because much of the
present labor pool is "legacy,"
if you get my drift.
And what about momentum? Well, the price of silver has
moved up in recent weeks, but
it's not quite a rocket-ride like cocoa; not yet anyhow.
Then again, people
tend not to see tipping points,
nor to appreciate how rapidly they can occur. That is, you may awaken one morning, and the price of
something (like cocoa or perhaps
silver) will be on a tear, and to the casual observer it will make no sense.
Whatever the case, the question
to ask yourself is if you are on the silver train right now, before it all begins to move very much? Or
will you wait it out a while,
until you're sure the train is rolling? Or will you be the one running down the platform, trying to grab
onto something before it all
leaves the station?
Another point to consider is what has happened with price
discovery in metals in general,
and precious metals in particular. Gold has definitely moved, by over $300 in just the past four
months.
The
formerly routine daily sell-down in, say, New York just can't beat out the global army of bidders who
want to move towards some
semblance of monetary safety as the US government destroys its currency in an orgy of growing debt and
interest payments.
Final takeaway: Silver is moving, and I suspect it will do a slingshot to catch up with
gold in terms of relative value,
metal for metal. Own physical, of course.
Own paper silver if you want to trade
the space (eg: iShares Silver
Trust: SLV). And own silver producers like Pan American Silver (PAAS), MAG Silver (MAG), Hecla (HL), or
Silvercrest
(SILV).
Of course, there are many other smaller plays in the silver
exploration, development and mining
space, many with great fundamentals and assets, and massive upside.
By every
indication, the metal is moving,
so you should buy a ticket and get on the train.











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