kingworldnews.com
Today one of the greats in the business exposed why the price of silver will surge above $100 in 27 months!
Silver Price Set To Surge Above $100
October 9 (King World News) – Stephen Leeb:
“Silver is often referred to as gold’s ‘sister’ metal. And if they were
real sisters, you could imagine that silver might well resent the
greater attention invariably lavished on its lustrous sibling.
I’ve
been making the case as strenuously as I can that gold is on the
threshold of a great bull market that will transcend anything seen in
the past, and I’ve urged all investors to make sure they have a big
stake in it. But here I want to give silver its due as well, for I have
long believed that as gold rises, silver – which for many investors
might be the more affordable metal to acquire – will be enjoying a big
bull move of its own…
Stephen Leeb continues:
“The factors accounting for silver’s surge, though, will diverge from
those propelling gold. Gold’s rise will reflect its role as a monetary
metal that will underpin international trade, starting in the East, and
help ration increasingly scarce commodities. Silver, too, is a monetary
metal and will always follow gold to some extent, but that is only one
major reason for its forthcoming brilliant rise. Equally significant, if
not more, will be sharply growing demand for silver because of its
critical industrial uses, which will be burgeoning in coming years.
Of
course, if silver supply was sufficiently abundant, demand could grow
sharply and it wouldn’t matter at all in terms of silver’s price. But
that isn’t the case. In fact, going back many decades, demand for silver
has somewhat exceeded supply for much of the time. When Warren Buffett
was accumulating silver in the 1980s, it was purely on the basis of
demand outstripping supply.
Silver Supply In Deficit For 10 Consecutive Years
According to research into precious metals conducted by Thompson
Reuters’s GFMS team, 2016 was the 10th consecutive year in which demand
for silver exceeded supply. Demand for silver has two broad parts.
Industrial demand has accounted for more than 55 percent of total
supply. Nonindustrial demand – including investment inventories needed
to back ETFs and the exchanges where silver is traded; coins and bars;
silverware; and jewelry – accounts for over 45 percent or more of supply
(the fact that the total of the two parts can top 100 percent of supply
is in sync with supply lagging demand).
You
might ask why, if demand has consistently been greater than supply,
silver prices have not already been in a powerful bull market. The
answer is that a good portion of monetary demand has gone into what GFMS
refers to as above ground stocks, which mostly include coins and bars,
but not either exchange or ETF inventories. This is silver has been
available to be shifted around so as to satisfy some of the industrial
demand. In other words, the accumulation of silver for nonindustrial
purposes – monetary uses plus jewelry – has found its way into
above ground stores that can help lessen the pressure on supply.
Of
these above ground stores, the most important are what are termed
custodian vaults, which contain by far the largest as well as the most
easily diverted stores of above ground silver. An estimated 1.5 billion
ounces of silver are contained in custodian vaults, with 1 billion of
those ounces, roughly one year of current worldwide supply, is in
custodian vaults in China.
By
contrast, as of the end of 2016, according to Thompson Reuters’ GFMS
group, only around 650 million ounces of silver were held by ETFs, and
just 250 million ounces were held by exchanges like the Shanghai Gold
Exchange (where silvers futures are traded along with gold futures).
Somewhat curiously, the GFMS also has devoted a fair amount of attention
to determining the relatively minuscule amount of silver held in
government coffers, estimating it comes to around 90 million ounces. It
has done this while paying far less attention to considering the import
of the far heftier holdings in custodian vaults, whose nearly 1.6
billion ounces represent some 60 percent of all above ground inventories.
Ross Beaty, China & The Coming Silver Shortages
But if contributions of silver from existing custodian vaults have been
enough to avert supply disruptions to industry, that will change as
industrial demand for silver intensifies, and it certainly will. Silver,
for instance, is critical to solar energy and particularly in
photovoltaics. Recently KWN published a piece that quoted Ross Beaty, Chairman of Pan American Silver, as
saying that some 100 million ounces of silver will be used in
photovoltaic cells in 2017 – roughly 10 percent of silver demand. I have
been arguing for years that solar demand for silver would be enough to
create shortages, but now realize that solar is just one part of what
will be explosive industrial demand for the metal.
Silver
has a number of very special properties including an unmatched ability
to conduct both heat and electricity. These properties make silver an
essential component not only in solar but of virtually anything to do
with information technology (IT). After
several years in the relative doldrums, information technology has been
ramping up. And a major chunk of this new-found growth is coming from –
you guessed it – China. The Middle Kingdom has been making a big push
to reorient its economy to emphasize new information industries, which
are currently growing twice as fast as China’s overall economy, which
is growing close to 7 percent a year.
Industries
that China will be promoting that will require silver include AI
(artificial intelligence), blockchains – which could be integral to
China’s introduction of a new gold-linked reserve currency – the auto
industry (both electric vehicles and internal combustion engines use
silver), and the Internet of Things, which will be used to link the
massive megacities China is creating. Some of these megacities will
house 50 million or more people and will be linked by a wide array of
circuits, and while any one of these circuits may contain just a small
amount of silver, their huge numbers will add up to a massive source of
demand.
The
point is that even the likely one billion ounces China currently holds
in custodian vaults won’t last long when matched against silver’s
growing uses in coming years – and remember, China isn’t a short-term
thinker, it plans for the long haul, 20 years out or longer. And with
industrial demand for silver in the next 10 to 15 years likely to be
much larger than total demand today and much greater than production,
which if it hasn’t already peaked is close to peaking, China almost
surely will decide to add to its custodial above ground reserves.
Silver To Surge Above $100 In 27 Months!
This means that China, which has been stockpiling oil and rare earths
and other resources it sees as critical to maintaining control over its
economy, is likely to decide – possibly at its forthcoming big
government get-together the week after next, to further add to overall
demand for silver by stockpiling even more silver. That will be an
additional source of demand that when added to the surging industrial
demand and continued strong monetary demand will contribute over the
near-term to much higher, possibly explosive silver prices.
The
bottom line: Independently of anything that happens with gold, silver
will be in a roaring bull market of its own. Silver owners will
experience a pathway to riches in coming years. In
the past, I’ve targeted silver as at least a $100 metal, and my best
projection now is that by 2020, the $100 target will look very
conservative.”
沒有留言:
張貼留言