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mamboni
9th December 2011, 07:12 AM
;DThe Daily Reckoning Presents
Buy Silver...Now!

http://www.agorafinancial.com/temp/DR/email/template/guesteditor.gifMatt Badiali


Silver is an amazing metal...which is why it’s likely to soar over the coming years...

You see, silver has more than 10,000 uses. It’s one of the world’s best conductors of heat and electricity. Inventors filed more patents on silver uses than any other precious metal in the world. And when silver is used for most industrial and technological purposes, it is used up forever... It simply costs too much to try to recycle the tiny bit of silver from every cell phone or casino chip.

I’m not saying industry is going to use up all the world’s silver. That simply can’t happen. But scarcity is a real issue.

Our rapid consumption of silver leaves very little to meet any uptick in demand from investors. A spike in interest will send prices spiraling higher...

Here’s a breakdown of the silver market. The table below shows the percentage of the total amount of silver consumed by each category over the past four years...

http://dailyreckoning.com/wp-content/blogs.dir/5/files/2011/12/DRUS12-08-11-1.gif
As you can see from the table above, only 12% of the silver supplied to the market made it to bullion in 2010. That means only a little more than 100 million ounces of silver became bullion for the entire investing world.

That’s a tiny fraction to sop up all the investment interest in the world.

Of that silver, about 43 million ounces went to exchange-traded funds like the iShares Silver Trust (SLV) and the Sprott Physical Silver Trust (PSLV).

That means you could buy all the extra silver bullion for about $2 billion. We could buy all the surplus silver bullion from the last four years for about $10 billion.

That’s the same as the market value of the iShares Silver Trust today. If you wanted to build another silver fund, you couldn’t. There just isn’t enough silver bullion out there to fill the order.

Even trying to amass that much physical silver would send the silver price soaring. It’s a simple market fact... When there is more demand than supply, it drives the price up.

And the economic problems confronting Europe and the United States have increased interest in precious metals... Silver gained a colossal 174% from August 2010 to April 2011.

In May 2011, however, the price collapsed 31% in just four weeks. The bull market simply ran up too far, too fast... and the decline wiped out many highly leveraged silver traders.

The big money is tiptoeing back into silver.

Last month, commodity trading advisors, pool operators, and hedge funds — the “big money” — weren’t interested in silver AT ALL...

But as they move back into the market, silver prices could soar. Let me show you what I’m talking about...

Jason Goepfert created SentimenTrader (http://clicks.dailyreckoning.com//t/AQ/AAhifg/AAhyKw/Exc/AQ/AZ-6ug/7CoV), a service that tracks investor sentiment toward various asset classes. According to Jason, silver just bounced off its most pessimistic reading in four years.

The so-called “commitment of non-commercial traders” hit 10,352. That’s incredibly low. The last time sentiment numbers were that low was in August 2007. Six months later, the price of silver was 59% higher. It rose from $12 per ounce to $19 per ounce.

I went all the way back to 2002 and found that silver sentiment bottomed near 10,000 six times... On average, the price of silver rose 33% in the next six months and 54% over the next year. This chart shows the last four times it bottomed...

Here’s how the silver price performed after each of the last four times silver sentiment bottomed out...

http://dailyreckoning.com/wp-content/blogs.dir/5/files/2011/12/DRUS12-08-11-2.gif
The best return came after Bottom No. 2, which coincided with the US banking/credit crisis. Silver soared an eye-popping 405%, including its parabolic rise in 2010.

As those numbers indicate, silver is one of the most volatile assets in the world. Over the last year, silver has seen massive price swings, including an 81% rally and two 30% drops. That forced many traders to liquidate their silver holdings in order to meet emergency short-term requirements. (Plus, the debacle at commodity broker MF Global has scared many folks out of the market.)

But the long-term drivers of gold and silver’s uptrends are still in place. Enormous and growing Asian economies like China and India are getting richer...and they have deep cultural affinities for precious metals. Plus, the Western world has lived way beyond its means for a long time...the debts and liabilities it has taken on can only be paid back with devalued, debased money. This is bullish for “real money” assets like gold and silver.

With sentiment so negative toward silver (and just beginning to turn back up), it’s a great time to take a position in this long-term bull market.

If gold and silver prices are nearly certain to rise over the next few years (and probably rise dramatically), the simplest way to play that trend is to buy bullion...real, hold-in-your-hand silver coins.

And I recommend everyone do just that... Buy some silver and store it away.

Regards,

Matt Badiali,
for The Daily Reckoning

P.S. If you’ve already built your bullion position...there’s another way to ride this trend to much larger gains than bullion is likely to offer. I just completed a full report on the opportunity. I wouldn’t be surprised to see every dollar you invest in this opportunity turn into $10 or more. Get the details here (http://clicks.dailyreckoning.com//t/AQ/AAhifg/AAhyKw/AAVPAg/AQ/AZ-6ug/DXX1).

osoab
9th December 2011, 08:05 AM
I bought some yesterday. Am I too late?

Dogman
9th December 2011, 08:15 AM
I bought some yesterday. Am I too late?That was yesterday , today is now!

Joe King
9th December 2011, 08:26 AM
I'm not disputing the jist of the article, but the numbers in this chart seem to not add up. Or is this based upon that new math I've heard rumors of over the years? lol



http://dailyreckoning.com/wp-content/blogs.dir/5/files/2011/12/DRUS12-08-11-1.gif
Shouldn't they all add up to 100?

2007 53+13+18+6+4+10=104%
2008 54+11+17+6+7+11=106%
2009 45+9+18+7+9+21=109%
2010 49+7+17+5+10+12=100%

:confused:


Edited to add: The second chart seems off, too. Is it trying to say that in the 12 months beginning 10/21/08 the price rose to $47.25 for a 405% gain? Huh?

undgrd
9th December 2011, 08:54 AM
I have no answer for you about the first chart.

The second chart
http://dailyreckoning.com/wp-content/blogs.dir/5/files/2011/12/DRUS12-08-11-2.gif

(low for the year * percentage) = increase

increase + low for the year = high for the year

Joe King
9th December 2011, 08:59 AM
The second chart
http://dailyreckoning.com/wp-content/blogs.dir/5/files/2011/12/DRUS12-08-11-2.gif

(low for the year * percentage) = increase

increase + low for the year = high for the year
The high for the year ending 10/21/09 was not $47.25
More like $23 unless they really meant 36 month period as opposed to 12 months

undgrd
9th December 2011, 09:01 AM
The high for the year ending 10/21/09 was not $47.25
More like $23

ok.

I was just explaining how he got his numbers

Joe King
9th December 2011, 09:07 AM
ok.

I was just explaining how he got his numbersI understand the math part, it's just his percentages, prices, and dates do not jive with one another. ie it's sloppy work that obviously wasn't checked.

mamboni
9th December 2011, 09:10 AM
I'm not disputing the jist of the article, but the numbers in this chart seem to not add up. Or is this based upon that new math I've heard rumors of over the years? lol



Shouldn't they all add up to 100?

2007 53+13+18+6+4+10=104%
2008 54+11+17+6+7+11=106%
2009 45+9+18+7+9+21=109%
2010 49+7+17+5+10+12=100%

:confused:




Yeah, I hadn't noticed that - they should add up to 100 in each year column. Anyway, I think that is a poor way to report silver consumption (percentages) becuase the total usage (in tons0) is increasing yearly and the percentages obfuscate this fact. It would be better to report gross consumption in tons and percent change per annum.

mamboni
9th December 2011, 09:11 AM
I bought some yesterday. Am I too late?

You're OK if you bought yesterday before 12:00 noon. If you bought after 12:01 noon then you probably missed the silver boat.;D;D;D

osoab
9th December 2011, 09:18 AM
You're OK if you bought yesterday before 12:00 noon. If you bought after 12:01 noon then you probably missed the silver boat.;D;D;D

Crap, it was after 3:00. I better go dump it in a landfill or throw em in a river.

Joe King
9th December 2011, 09:20 AM
The other "problem" with that first chart is that it shows all industrial users consuming a smaller percentage year over year and investment as being the area of growth. If true, that shouldn't make anyone happy. Other than industrial users of silver, at least.
What I'd prefer to see in a chart like that is industrial uses going up with investments staying flat. There's going to come a point that those investing in silver purely for profit will want to cash-in, thereby crashing the price for everyone else.

mamboni
9th December 2011, 10:03 AM
Crap, it was after 3:00. I better go dump it in a landfill or throw em in a river.

Look, you can get fined for dumping it illegally. Send me your crappy silver bullion and I'll take care of it for you free of charge, OK?;D

Joe King
9th December 2011, 10:10 AM
Look, you can get fined for dumping it illegally. Send me your crappy silver bullion and I'll take care of it for you free of charge, OK?;DNo need for such extreme actions, I'm just pointing out that if large amounts are being stockpiled year after year, at some point it will all come back into play. If a little at a time, great.....but if everyone sees a "magic number" coming and it becomes a lot at one time coming back into play, it won't be good for anyone except industrial users of silver.

mamboni
9th December 2011, 10:24 AM
No need for such extreme actions, I'm just pointing out that if large amounts are being stockpiled year after year, at some point it will all come back into play. If a little at a time, great.....but if everyone sees a "magic number" coming and it becomes a lot at one time coming back into play, it won't be good for anyone except industrial users of silver.

Thanks for that Joe. You just saved me a trip to the local landfill.1802

osoab
9th December 2011, 10:39 AM
Look, you can get fined for dumping it illegally. Send me your crappy silver bullion and I'll take care of it for you free of charge, OK?;D

I'll keep your advisement in mind doc. Granted, I really don't like what doc's normally tell me.

Joe King
9th December 2011, 10:52 AM
Thanks for that Joe. You just saved me a trip to the local landfill.1802


I'm glad to have been able to help. http://emoticoner.com/files/emoticons/smileys/green-hat-smiley.gif?1292867610
...and with the gas $ you've saved, you can get lunch for the family instead. ie a win-win for Mamboni.