These are some comments in response to a pro-silver article posted yesterday. I like to keep tabs on the counter-arguments to our thinking.
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/for-si ... genumber=2
[color=#004000]Adm Price
19 hours ago
Silver is not "cheap" at all at anywhere near current inflated prices. Silver has soared from $4 an ounce in 2001 to $50 an ounce in 2011 before falling significantly and coming down nearly 50% to its present price of around $28 an ounce and it has a whole lot further to fall to get back to its mean of $8 per ounce. Moreover, there is vast oversupply of silver in the markets. Annual supply is over 1 billion metric ounces with about 805 million ounces coming from new production and around 200 million ounces coming from scrap/recycling, but there is only demand for around 800 million ounces a year leaving a 200 million ounce overhang (over supply) in the silver markets which guarantees silver will continue to fall substantially.
[color=#004000]Harvey Texler
Sorry Myra, silver is anything but 'cheap.' For a metal whose cash costs are $5.16 to produce and whose fair value is at best in the 12-17 range, let's notget carried away with visions of declarations of cheapness and potential runs to the moon. There is an overhang of at least 7400 tons in the silver market, and if it were not for greedy ETFs and their wacky speculation, silver would be nowhere near where it is today. Aside from that, do bear in mind that silver is the single most risk-laden asset you could plow your gambling money into. It carries fully twice the risk that gold ownership entails and its returns have historically been under gold's. The last decade is NOT the new normal for silver. Silver in the teens is indeed on the horizon. Waaaaaa- I can hear the silver bugs right about now....[/color][/color]
Here is a counter point to what these two guys are saying.
[color=#000080]Theodore Shane Osborne II
$5.16 cash cost to produce is for the Zinc/Lead mines and generally only includes refining and shipping. Zinc/Lead mining creates 36% of overall mine production for silver. This does not reflect an actual cost of bringing the silver to market. Silver mining is 30% of total mining and costs are roughly $24 an ounce when you look at the silver mines numbers. New exploration pushes prices to $29 an ounce, but older established mines can produce and bring to market near $22.
Energy cost and environmental compliance will keep going up, and ore grades will keep going down going forward. Any price point below $29 is a buy.
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My take:
I'm not a numbers guy so I don't have a handle on the supply/demand numbers like I should. However these detractors are leaving out some key facts:
1. The dramatic increase in the money supply caused by QE and other monetary tools
2. The growing investment demand for silver.
3. The apparent silver physical shortages caused by this decrease in price.
4. The huge short position that JPM holds and the apparent manipulation that it enables.