Silver in demand...EQUEDIA comments on silver
posted on May 30, 10 01:03PM Use the IP Check tool [?]
Silver - The Human Metal
Nothing demonstrates the mood swings of today's markets better than the price of silver.
Call it silver's split personality: It's both a precious metal investors turn to for safety and an industrial metal that gets dragged down on signs of economic weakness.
When gold moves, silver moves. When base metals moves, silver moves as well. Silver is a metal that can move with both gold, and copper.
So while investors turn to precious metals on concerns of Europe's debt crisis, the growing concerns over a potential slowdown in China has caused the price of silver to go in both directions. A tug of war, if you will.
That makes silver tough to predict. One week it's flirting with the high price of gold, while the next it's lured away by copper, zinc and lead. Silver's behaviour reminds me of my ex -- seeing wild mood swings from one day to the next. But there is one big difference between the two: I can make money with silver.
And there is no better time to do this than the present.
While silver has been volatile, the price is expected to continue rising due to flat supply, rising industrial demand in China, a North American recovery, as well as continued strong investment demand, according to a report released Thursday by London-based metals firm GFMS Ltd.
The report shows world investment demand for silver nearly doubled in 2009 to a whopping 216 million ounces, compared with the year before. That's a value of about $3.2-billion on an average price of $14.67 per ounce in 2009. Of those investments, about 137 million ounces were from silver exchange-traded funds, a 184-per-cent year-over-year increase - the highest level in the past 20 years.
Silver bullion coins are also being snatched up at record pace. As of May 26, the American Silver Eagles sales has already reached 3.5 million. This is closing in on the all-time monthly record of 3,696,000 set in December 1986.
The demand for silver is not just growing, it's exploding.
But there's a problem.
Silver supplies are running low. Real low. Just take a look at the 2009 results:
•Net silver supply from above-ground stocks dropped by 86 percent in 2009.
•Scrap silver supply dropped for the third consecutive year and hit a new 13-year low of 165.7 million ounces.
•Government silver stocks reached their lowest levels in over a decade.
All of this leads to the obvious: We need more silver. Not just the silver that we claim is in the ground. We need people to pull it out. That's why our current investment philosophies are directly geared towards the silver miners and those with the potential for some big discoveries.
Despite being a precious metal, silver has also been dramatically affected by industrial demand - not to mention the possibility of price manipulation (see The Silver Conspiracy). So while the price of silver should move with gold, it has been hampered by industrial demand.
Silver has tracked copper prices many times over the past year, during which time economic growth was substantially hindered. But as economies around the world recover and grow in 2010, demand for industrial use silver will, too.
Signs of industrial demand are already picking up strongly. According to GFMS' executive chairman Philip Klapwijk, this expected growth in industrial demand for silver may lead the white metal to outperform gold in 2010...and have silver reach $20 an ounce "in the next couple of months."
You can see why our stance on silver and silver plays remains strong. The key to investing is diversification. This year, our key is to diversify into different precious metals plays.