Silver: A Currency for
Crisis
Marc Davis, www.BNWnews.ca
Silver
is increasingly becoming a global monetary metal, mostly due to inflationary
concerns and the debasement of the world’s major currencies. And that’s the main
driver for silver’s surging bull market, according to some key players in the
precious metals investment sector.
Rising
inflation in China and India, as well as Europe’s ongoing sovereignty debt
crisis, are major contributors to gold and silver reverting back to their
traditional “safe haven” status, according to New York-based James Steel, a
precious metals analyst for HSBC Securities.
Referring to his big league investment house as “the world’s largest bullion
bank,” Steel says silver’s role as a monetary metal is gathering the most
momentum in emerging economies. Ones that are growing at three times the rate of
the established industrialized world, he says.
“The
macro economic trends from emerging markets are therefore positive for both gold
and silver,” Steel adds.
In
particular, China’s growing middle classes – which now number well over 400
million people – are fueling an “explosive” growth in demand for silver as a
hedge against fast rising inflation. So says a spokesperson for the Industrial
and Commercial Bank of China (ICBC), the world’s largest bank by market value.
ICBC
sold 418,000 ounces of physical silver to Chinese citizens in January, alone,
compared with 1.06 million ounces for the whole of 2010, according to Zhou Ming,
deputy head of the bank’s precious metals department. Other Chinese banks have
been just as busy.
Notably, China was a net importer of over 100 million ounces of silver last
year, whereas only a few years ago the fast emerging superpower was exporting an
equal amount annually. And China’s ravenous new demand for silver as a store of
value in inflationary times is growing exponentially. This is illustrated by the
fact that silver imports last year increased four-fold over 2009.
So the
pressure is on for the world’s mining community to ramp-up production to meet
burgeoning worldwide silver demand, mostly from investors but also from the
increasingly silver-reliant industrial sector. However, annual demand is on the
verge of outstripping supply. By way of explanation, silver is primarily
extracted as a by-product of gold mining – an industry that’s already operating
at peak capacity. Furthermore, there’s only a small handful of primary silver
producers, which are likewise hard pressed to replace mined-out reserves with
new supplies, especially in the near-term.
However, one ambitious mining junior appears to be well on its way to bucking
the trend. Aurcana Corporation (TSX.V: AUN) already operates a profitable silver
mine in Mexico but is now expanding into the U.S. to achieve a significant jump
in output. The company is doing this by breathing new life into Shafter, a
past-producing silver mine in southwest Texas, which it aims to re-commission by
mid 2012.
Company president Lenic Rodriguez says it’s not just investors in Southeast Asia
who are buying up silver bars, coins and other silver-denominated investments at
an unprecedented rate.
“Americans are doing the same, which is causing some shortage of silver coins
and bars. For instance, there’s a backlog of orders from investors for one-ounce
American Silver Eagle coins that are manufactured by the U.S. Mint. And even
100-ounce silver bars are becoming scarce,” he says.
So
Aurcana is aiming to help address this shortfall by producing its own silver
bars, which will display a ‘Made in Texas’ stamp of authenticity. This should be
especially appealing to patriotic U.S. investors, Rodriguez says.
Notably, his company’s Shafter mine should yield prolific enough output to add
an addition 10 per cent per annum to America’s overall production, making it one
of the biggest primary silver mines in the world, Rodriguez says. Together, both
of Aurcana’s mines should begin generating a combined output of over five
million ounces of silver on an annualized basis by mid 2012. This will be enough
to make Aurcana second only to big-league Hecla Mining as the only significant
primary silver miners in North America. It would also promote the company into
the ranks of the world’s few bonafide mid-tier silver producers.
Meanwhile, exponentially increasing global investment demand is already
threatening to overwhelm existing silver supplies, according to Eric Sprott. A
long-time precious metals investment guru, he’s the founder of the Toronto-based
investment firm, Sprott Asset Management. His renowned Sprott Hedge Fund is
heavily weighted in precious metals and has generated an estimated 23%
annualized return over the past decade.
Such a
surge in demand can only drive silver prices higher, Sprott says. That’s because
the mining industry’s annual output (at around 600 to 700 million ounces per
annum over the last decade) is a relatively inelastic supply, in spite of the
sustained bull market for silver prices.
He
also points to the fact that the sovereignty debt crisis is deepening in Europe
and a continued policy of quantitative easing in the U.S. is continuing to
undermine the value of the greenback. Both of which are compelling enough
reasons for investors in the northern hemisphere to be equally as enthusiastic
for silver as the Chinese and Indians.
This
flight to quality and out of FIAT money (currencies that aren’t backed by hard
assets) bodes well for both silver and gold, according to Nathan Narusis. The
business developer for the Toronto-based gold and silver oriented mutual fund,
the BMG Bullion Fund, says he likewise believes that silver is “beginning to
assume its role as a monetary metal.”
“Both
mid-term and long-term trends are therefore in place to ensure gold and silver
will continue rising through 2011 and well beyond,” he adds.
Silver
has stolen much of gold’s luster as of lately. Its spot price spiked by 83% last
year, whereas gold posted a much more modest, yet nonetheless very impressive
30% gain.
The
grey metal’s dominant outperformance of gold is set to continue, according to
another precious metals expert, Ken Gerbino. The Los Angeles-based precious
metals hedge fund manager, who runs the Gerbino Gold Group, says that physical
silver will remain more popular among investors because its lower unit price
makes it much more affordable.
“Because silver is the poor man’s gold, it will outperform gold in 2011 and for
years to come since 90% of the world’s populations are poor,” he says. “As
inflation rates in China and India increase over the near and medium term,
precious metal buying should accelerate.”
However, Sprott is far more colorful in his like-minded assessment of the
situation: “Asian demand for physical gold and silver is like a tsunami,” he
says. “The inflation resurgence in Asia is quietly driving new, unforeseen
levels of physical demand for these metals.”
“While the world continues to float on a sea of paper, this massive wave of
physical demand silently threatens to crash into the physical gold and silver
market, wiping out tangible supply.”
The principals of
www.BNWnews.ca do not directly or indirectly own shares in the stocks
and investment funds mentioned in this article.
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