Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature currently requires accessing the site using the built-in Safari browser.
when ratio at 32, silver was at its peak May 2011
the ratio top at around 128 when covid 19 hit
Y is when gold at new high 2431usd
it has been a 31% drop in ratio after covid hit to Y
View attachment 12064
You may have confused alor's comment for mine?you can cherry pick any timeframe to suit the narrative.
a few thoughts in response
- Mar 2020 was a black swan event and is an outlier outside of expected norms
- this reinforces my point made earlier - in times of crises, gold is greater than silver
- yes 31% drop from Mar 2020, but also ~316% gain from 2011 to Mar 2020, and a ~186% gain 2011 to today LOL
- I started stacking in 2011, and arguably I've done better with a gold heavy stack compared with someone who started the same time as me, but was silver heavy. GSR around 86 now vs in the 30s back in 2011. E.g. my 1oz of gold was worth 30oz of silver, now it's worth 86oz of silver while the silver guy still only has 30oz of silver. My stack is almost 3x more valuable in silver oz terms!! Again, cherry picking a timeframe to suit my point of view
- do you think in the future there will be more or less uncertainty in geopolitics, the economy, in society, etc and decide whether that environment is more favourable to gold or silver (answer in my opinion is gold)
- had you relied on historical GSR, before 2020, GSR was topping out in the 80s, how could anyone know it was going up to over 100? Say you swapped gold for silver when it was 80, you would have missed the Mar 2020 top. Now that it's sitting at 86oz, you're back to square one and have gone nowhere (cherry picking a timeframe again)
- the clear trend from 2011 to today is an uptrend in GSR
edit to add
Interesting the reported government sales was quite high. having said that, can you outlast the government's stockpiles, holding out for the day when they finally deplete and silver is allowed to appreciate in price without suppression by said stockpile sales? you don't know how much they have and how long they can sell into the market for
Yeh I was responding to alor regarding the 31% drop vs the hundreds of percent gain in GSR over different timeframes
And also responding to yours about government stockpile sales
The 7:1 mining supply ratio has also been put forward as another reason why silver should be worth more, which has also yet to eventuate. Other supply and demand factors are at play and either metals’ abundance in the earths crust hasn’t played a part for a long time in determining price
If you remove aboveground stockpiles as a factor, then abundance and mine output play the most important role. This should be analysed and considered first above all, then stockpiles should be factored in and assessed to make a determination.
It appears we agree on most things but differ on the belief that aboveground stockpiles won't play a significant role in the mid and long-term.
There's so much I consider when looking at the silver market and the longevity of these undisclosed stockpiles:
Mine supply - Several of the largest mines in Mexico which have the annual output of 4-5 smaller mines are set to deplete their reserves by 2028. Last time I checked, Mexico was the largest silver producing country in the world, so that will drastically affect supply.
- Investment into exploration and new discoveries have been low over the years due to environmental red tape and low silver price. It takes up to 10 years from discovery to mining the first ounce out of the ground, so lack of investment translates to significant lag in mine supply once the price does jump to levels that incentivises exploration.
- Silver is largely found closer to the surface, unlike gold which is found deeper within the earth's crust. All the easy to mine silver already has a mine on it.
Peak Silver - based upon geographic surveys, mining output and declining efficiency, we're set to reach peak Silver Mining in 2030. Not only that, but we're set to reach peak Copper, Lead and zinc mining by 2028-2032. The majority of Silver mining being a byproduct of mining these base metals and gold, then peak Copper, Lead, zinc and Gold also means less silver production by default.
China - There's a reason why China stopped exporting silver over a decade ago. There's also a reason why China has removed the ban on PM's and encouraged its citizens to buy Gold and a
Silver. If silver was so abundant, such strategic moves wouldn't be necessary.
Demand - As so many have predicted, the increase of demand from the industrial side has accelerated, all while mine supply has declined. Although investment demand is still important, silver doesn't need it to increase. But if it were to increase, that would just put additional pressure on a market that's already seeing significant 200+ Moz deficits.
India in the month of February imported the entire global mine supply for that month. Demand is accelerating, and once the price let's go, investment demand is going to cause some serious pain.
I don't just blindly believe aboveground reserves/stockpiles will dry up, I've made a calculated assessment to determine that it's an inevitability... And it may come sooner than we expect. The two things that may stand in the way of stacking silver is a major decline in demand (possibly due to population collapse) and silver being seen as a strategic metal and governments making private ownership illegal. Beyond this, I don't think anything will stand in the way of silver.
I may be wrong but I'm pretty sure the mining process, or at least the extraction from ore is more complicated than it is for gold. Silver just appears more frequently in the earth's crust.Silver being easier to mine should explain some of the reason for the lower price, regardless of its abundance ratio in the ground, if it is indeed less effort to extract than for gold
As for China not exporting it, could just be because they manufacture nearly all the world's solar panels and so they use it instead of exporting it
Ok, just did a quick search. Silver is more abundant but is mostly found mixed with zinc and lead, and the leeching process to extract it is more complicated.
So in theory it should be tied to mining costs, which rise with inflation (fuel, machinery ... etc).
I still think silver prices are artificially held low via the paper market.
Silver Users Association SUA, which industrie has such a, most of them are supply side basedSo in theory it should be tied to mining costs, which rise with inflation (fuel, machinery ... etc).
I still think silver prices are artificially held low via the paper market.