Silver Buying Only Starting !!!!!
You really need to read this. Excellent story. Time to get a beer, coffee, scotch, or whatever your preference is and sit down and read this. I'm not a big fan of ETF's and paper silver, but if you take that part with a grain of salt, and concentrate on the main focus of the article, I think you'll understand.
CYA: SE:
***********************************
Adam Hamilton,
CPA
May 15,
2015
CYA: SE:
***********************************
Silver Buying Only Starting
Adam Hamilton
May 15,
2015 2906 Words
Silver has enjoyed
a fantastic week, awakening from its bottoming slumber to surge with
gold. And this strong silver investment demand is likely only
starting. American stock traders and futures speculators control
two of the world’s largest pools of capital active in the silver
market. And the former group still remains woefully underinvested
in silver, while the latter still has massive short positions left
to cover.
The global leader
in fundamental silver analysis is the venerable
Silver Institute, a
think tank primarily funded by the world’s biggest and best silver
miners. Every year, it publishes excellent comprehensive data on
global silver supply and demand. Last year, total worldwide silver
demand ran 1067m ounces. But investing in silver coins, bars, and
ETFs only accounted for 197m, less than 1/5th of total demand.
Silver
investment’s relatively small slice of that demand pie implies it
isn’t important, but nothing could be farther from the truth.
Silver’s two largest demand categories are industrial fabrication
and jewelry, weighing in at about 4/7ths and just over 1/5th
respectively. But these are very inelastic, they just don’t
change much regardless of silver’s price. This is readily evident
in the Institute’s past decade of data.
The average silver
price in the last 10 years has been a roller coaster, skyrocketing
from just over $7 in 2005 to over $35 in 2011 before collapsing back
down near $19 in 2014. Yet global industrial demand was 639m ounces
in 2005, 628m in 2011, and 595m last year. There is often no
substitute for silver in manufactured products, and they use so
little per unit that companies really don’t care what silver’s price
is.
But silver
investment demand varies dramatically with the shifting whims
of traders’ sentiment towards this volatile metal. Over the past
decade it has ranged from 52m ounces on the low side in 2005 to 289m
on the high side in 2008, an incredibly volatile range! And since
any market’s prices are effectively set by marginal new
buying and selling, nothing is more important for silver prices than
investment demand.
The past decade’s
average annual silver investment demand was 196m ounces, which
2014’s 197m is dead on. For our purposes today, let’s round that to
200m ounces per year. That works out to under 17m per month.
This basic background knowledge of global silver investment demand
is essential in order to understand just how bullish silver looks
today since this latest round of buying is likely only starting.
Traditional silver
investing in physical coins and bars is the largest category of
investment demand, averaging 136m ounces per year over the last
decade. But it’s challenging to track, since the myriads of silver
dealers and investors around the world don’t have to report their
transactions. Silver ETFs, on the other hand, report their holdings
daily and are easily collated. Their demand averages 67m ounces per
year.
The world’s
flagship silver ETF is the mighty iShares Silver Trust, which trades
as SLV in the States. Its holdings this week were nearly 324m
ounces, the equivalent of about a year and 2/3rds of worldwide
investment demand. Launched in April 2006, it is the easiest,
fastest, and cheapest way for American stock investors to
gain silver exposure in their portfolios. This opened silver up to
vast new pools of capital.
Silver has always
had a zealous hardcore base of investors who decry any type of
“paper silver”, which includes ETFs. If it’s not physical silver in
their own possession, they want nothing to do with it. While I’ve
always personally used and recommended that classic method of silver
investing, it’s not for everyone. A lot of investors ranging from
hedge funds to institutions legally can’t buy or don’t want the
hassles of physical.
And silver ETFs
are a perfect alternative for them. These investors buy ETF shares
for a trivial fraction of what the premiums run on physical silver,
and SLV in particular tracks the silver price perfectly. This can
only happen because SLV is a conduit for stock-market capital
to flow into and out of physical silver bullion. SLV’s
managers have to constantly adjust SLV’s holdings to keep their
ETF’s price mirroring silver’s.
When stock traders
buy SLV shares faster than silver itself is being bought, they
threaten to decouple to the upside. So SLV’s managers issue enough
new ETF shares to offset this excess demand. Then they plow the
proceeds directly into physical silver bullion held in trust for
their shareholders. Thus any differential buying pressure on SLV
shares directly bids up the underlying global physical silver
market.
And just as silver
is on the verge of a major breakout following this week’s sharp
rally, American stock investors owning silver via SLV are still
woefully underinvested by recent standards. This first chart looks
at SLV’s silver-bullion holdings, with SLV’s price superimposed on
top. And it reveals big room for new SLV buying, which will shunt
stock-market capital directly into silver and accelerate its price
gains.
Despite the very
weak silver prices in recent years and resulting extreme bearishness
on this precious metal, SLV’s holdings have actually risen on
balance. They have enjoyed an exceptionally well-defined
uptrend channel in the last several years, which seems pretty
amazing. But realize that as silver’s price dropped, the amount of
stock-market capital invested in SLV shares still contracted
though its holdings grew.
Over this chart’s
span, silver peaked just under $37 per ounce in late February 2012.
That day SLV’s holdings of 313m ounces were worth $11.6b. Silver’s
brutal bear market finally looks to have bottomed in early November
2014 at just over $15 per ounce. By that day SLV’s holdings had
grown to 343m ounces, but this hoard was only worth $5.3b. So the
SLV holdings’ uptrend is not as counterintuitive as it seems.
Though SLV’s
holdings climbed 9.7% between silver’s two extremes of recent years,
the value of that silver plummeted 54% which was right in line with
silver’s 58% loss over this span. So American stock investors
certainly haven’t been hot on silver. In the middle of this week,
as silver surged 3.8% to retake $17, SLV’s holdings were worth just
$5.5b. That is vanishingly small, a trivial drop in the
stock-capital bucket.
For comparison, of
the 500 companies included in the benchmark S&P 500 stock index,
only 26 had market capitalizations of $5.5b or less as of the end of
last month. So American stock investors still have virtually
nothing invested in silver. As silver continues rallying, they
will start getting interested and then excited and buy in. And that
differential buying will catapult silver higher, accelerating its
rally and allure.
Only time will
tell how much SLV buying we’re going to see, but it has the
potential to be really big. This ETF’s peak silver holdings of just
over 366m ounces came back in late April 2011 as silver was
rocketing up over $48 in a
speculative mania.
That day SLV’s holdings were worth $17.2b, or 3.1x higher
than this week’s levels! But it could take massive silver gains
over years to fuel such a big jump in stock capital invested.
More interesting
for the near-term is the SLV-holdings uptrend. Silver has remained
epically out of favor since its dismal bottom late last year. Since
then its price has largely languished in a super-low trading range,
mostly grinding listlessly sideways. So American stock investors
have had no incentives at all to up their silver exposure. But this
week’s young rally is already starting to change that bearish
psychology.
SLV’s holdings
around 324m ounces in the middle of this week certainly reflect the
universal apathy and antipathy towards silver. As sentiment shifts
from extreme bearishness back towards neutral, SLV is likely to see
serious differential buying pressure on its shares. Remember that
if stock traders bid up SLV shares faster than silver itself is
rallying, SLV’s managers have to issue shares to buy more silver
bullion.
Today the upper
resistance of SLV holdings’ uptrend of recent years is around 352m
ounces. Regaining that level would require over 28m ounces of
differential buying. And even in silver’s dark recent years, SLV
has witnessed multiple holdings surges from support to resistance
that didn’t take much time at all. They happened in early 2013,
mid-2013, and mid-2014, and each only took a couple months or
so.
So the
near-term silver buying potential from American stock traders is
great. They remain woefully underinvested in silver right as it’s
starting to surge, and they are likely to buy SLV shares
aggressively enough to force a holdings build on the order of 28m
ounces in a couple months. Remember that global monthly investment
demand averages under 17m, so that’s a colossal boost from SLV
buying alone.
Running these
numbers, enough SLV differential buying merely to return its
holdings back up to recent resistance would boost global silver
investment demand by 85% for a couple months! That’s one major
reason why I suspect the recent silver buying is only starting.
And the really bullish and exciting thing is nothing begets buying
like buying. The more silver rallies, the more investors
will notice it and start to chase it.
But despite that
large pool of capital by silver’s standards deployed in SLV, there’s
another pool that just dwarfs it. There’s no one on the planet that
moves more capital into and out of silver than the American futures
speculators. They aggressively trade silver’s flows and ebbs with
extreme leverage, exerting the greatest influence on silver’s daily
price action. And their short positions are the key to
silver’s near-term fortunes.
This next chart
looks at the total levels of long and short silver futures contracts
held by these dominant American futures speculators. This data is
published weekly by the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission in
its famous Commitments of Traders reports. And the latest read
current to last Tuesday reveals high short positions remaining in
silver futures. These large bets will soon have to be covered.
While silver’s
long-term price levels are ultimately a function of global supply
and demand, in the short term American futures trading is the whole
game. Note the super-strong inverse correlation between the
SLV price in blue and speculators’ total silver-futures short
contracts in red. Silver plunges when they aggressively short it,
and then rallies when they subsequently scramble to exit those
leveraged bearish bets.
This outsized
influence of futures shorting on silver’s price is primarily a
function of two things. First, as silver has fallen deeply out of
favor in recent years investing interest has dramatically
waned. So the influence of futures speculation on silver prices
rose proportionally. Second, futures trading is a hyper-risky
zero-sum game played with extreme leverage. That gives futures
speculators outsized silver-price impact.
Each silver
futures contract controls 5000 ounces of silver, which is worth
$85,000 even at this week’s still-terribly-depressed silver prices.
Yet speculators only need to keep $7700 in their accounts for each
silver contract they own, the current minimum maintenance margin.
That means they can run leverage of up to 11x, which is
extreme. In the US stock markets, leverage has been legally limited
to 2x since 1974.
At 11x leverage, a
mere 9% move by silver against speculators’ positions will wipe out
100% of the capital they risked. And they could lose even more than
originally bet if they face margin calls! Silver has always had a
well-deserved reputation as an exceedingly-volatile metal, so 9%
moves are nothing. This past Tuesday and Wednesday, silver surged
5.4% and that was modest by silver’s wild standards.
Speculators
shorting silver, betting on its price falling, effectively have to
borrow that silver before they sell it. This saddles them
with the legal contractual obligation to buy that silver back to
repay their silver debt. So high silver-futures short positions by
this group of traders are very bullish for this white metal since
they represent guaranteed near-future buying. As this chart
shows, silver soon rallies after major shorting.
While speculators’
silver-futures short positions today aren’t extreme by recent years’
epic levels, they are still very high. As of last Tuesday’s CoT
data, the latest available when this essay was published, American
speculators held 49.6k short-side contracts. That is a huge bearish
bet on silver prices. Between 2009 to 2012, the last normal years
for the precious-metals markets, their short-side bets averaged just
21.5k.
The reason silver
collapsed in early 2013 was because gold suffered its worst
quarterly loss in 93 years thanks to the Federal Reserve’s
radically-unprecedented
QE3 manipulations
in the financial markets. As the Fed levitated the general stock
markets, demand for alternative investments led by gold withered.
And silver is ultimately a
leveraged play on
gold, amplifying the yellow metal’s price action in both
directions.
But even since
then in the Fed’s epically-distorted markets, speculators’ total
silver short contracts have rapidly contracted to or near 27k
four separate times. This is support for speculator shorting in
recent years. So it’s highly likely this group of traders’ downside
silver bets will once again sharply fall back to these levels in the
coming months. And that represents incredible levels of buying to
catapult silver higher.
As of that latest
CoT report, American speculators would have to buy to cover 22.6k
contracts merely to return to that 27k short-side support level.
And in the futures markets, the price impact of buying a long
contract to offset and cover an existing short and buying a new long
contract is identical. With each short contract representing 5000
ounces, this support approach would require an amazing 113m
ounces of buying!
Now remember
annual global silver investment demand averages around 200m ounces,
so this short covering alone is equivalent to about 7 months of
normal demand. And as the chart above shows, once these
short-covering episodes get underway they unfold fast. The
more speculators who buy to cover, the faster the silver price
rallies. And the sharper silver’s climb, the more pressure on
remaining traders to cover.
It’s only taken
two or three months in recent years for speculators to buy back
enough of their shorts to drive them back down to that 27k-contract
support line. And that was from even higher total-short levels. So
let’s assume a couple months for this next support approach. Run
the numbers on that, and this coming short covering equates to
staggering buying of over 56m ounces per month. That’s incredible!
During that
short-covering frenzy, silver demand from this mandatory futures
buying would run 3.4x the normal monthly average just under 17m
ounces! If investors are migrating back into silver at the same
time, both in physical and ETF terms, silver is going to power
dramatically higher during that brief span. And investors returning
becomes more and more likely with each passing day of silver
rallying on balance.
So looking at SLV
holdings and American speculators’ silver-futures shorts alone,
silver buying is only starting. Both groups of traders are
likely to shift large amounts of capital into silver in a short
period of time, on the order of a couple months. And they will soon
be joined by investors from around the world, in a surge of new
buying that will almost certainly ignite silver’s next major upleg.
Its upside potential is great.
Investors can
certainly play this in traditional physical silver coins and bars or
through the ETFs led by SLV. Since silver is so universally loathed
these days, investors have forgotten that its price averaged over
$31 in 2012 before the Fed’s extreme stock-market distortions.
And as those are gradually unwound, starting with the
coming rate hikes,
precious metals should mean revert back up to pre-QE3 normal levels.
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The bottom line is
the recent silver buying is likely only just starting. American
stock investors remain woefully underinvested in silver, while
American futures speculators remain heavily short it. Even in the
anomalous recent years, it’s only taken a couple of months or so for
both extremes to normalize. And that buying alone would run
multiples of normal global silver investment demand over that span.
The resulting
silver rally will probably be quite big and strong emerging from
such bearish sentiment extremes. And it will motivate legions of
investors around the world to redeploy in silver again. The more
they buy, the faster silver will rally. And that will attract in
even more investors, once again forming that very powerful bullish
virtuous circle that silver is so famous for. Silver has real
potential to surprise on the upside.
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