Silver Set to Soar: Myra Saefong
A pretty good read. Not much new news lately. But this is decent. Check it out.
CYA: SE:
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CYA: SE:
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Silver bullion prices are expected to jump as solar and smartphone demand rises and the Fed tries to stave off economic weakness
Gold prices have far outpaced gains in silver so far
this year, but silver will emerge as the winner for the second year in a
row.
With a per-ounce price of $17.41 for silver futures
as of Friday, analysts say the white metal is poised for a big climb,
particularly as the gold-to-silver ratio stands well above historical
averages. “Silver is definitely undervalued compared to gold and as a
stand-alone investment. I consider it likely to be the most undervalued
asset in the general investment markets,” says Paul Mladjenovic, author
of Precious Metals Investing For Dummies.
The best barometer of its potential gains comes
from its value relative to gold. The long-term average gold-to-silver
ratio runs around 15 to 1, while the modern average going back a century
is roughly 40 to 1, says Mark O’Byrne, research director at precious-metals storage provider GoldCore.
The ratio, which reflects how many ounces of silver bullion it takes to
equal the value of one ounce of gold, stood at a whopping 75 to 1 on
Friday.
That
steep ratio suggests “it’s a good time to buy silver bullion,” says
O’Byrne. He explains that the “huge amount of silver used up in
industrial applications” suggests the ratio should fall over the long
term: “It’s likely that the gold/silver ratio will gradually return to
below the 100-year average of 40 to 1.” At the current gold price, that
would put silver at nearly $32 an ounce, O’Byrne says.
So far this year, however, prices of gold futures
have risen nearly 12%, while silver has gained roughly 6%. Last year,
silver’s climb of about 16% outpaced gold’s rise of almost 9%.
“Silver isn’t keeping pace with gold because the
market perception is that gold is a safer play, while the market
perceives silver’s role as exposed to economic weakness. But as
inflation heats up, more of the public will realize silver’s second role
as a store of value and inflation hedge,” says Mladjenovic.
Gold is viewed as more of a “pure monetary play, so
as more difficulties emerge with paper assets,” such as currencies and
debt, “gold will hold up well,” he adds. At the same time, silver, which
is a smaller market, has “greater ties to industry,” notably in tech
products like smartphones and solar power, and “will do well as markets
see greater demand in those sectors.”
The main reason gold has outperformed silver this
year, however, is the U.S. dollar, says Brien Lundin, editor of Gold
Newsletter, noting, “Gold and the greenback have been trading in a very
close inverse correlation for about the last two years, and the
relationship has only grown closer this year.”
THE DOLLAR, AS REPRESENTED by
the Intercontinental Exchange’s U.S. Dollar Index (ticker: DXY), has
fallen 8.8% this year because of “underlying skepticism” about the
Federal Reserve’s ability to keep raising rates, says Lundin. “Even the
Fed admits a new-normal rate environment would mean a federal-funds rate
of around 2.5%. Balance that against its goal of 2% inflation, and you
see they [the Fed] want an ultralow real-rate environment that would be
bullish for gold and bearish for the dollar,” he adds. Traders in the
fed-futures market still overwhelmingly expect a
quarter-percentage-point interest-rate hike at the central bank’s
December meeting.
If or when that happens, silver will post the bigger gain. GoldCore’s O’Byrne expects
gold to finish the year above $1,300 an ounce, for a gain of roughly
13% in 2017. Silver, meanwhile, is set to test $20 an ounce by the end
of this year, and close above $19—representing a “healthy” 20% gain for
the year.
Nifty volatile while Sensex continues with the bull run, lead by a strong surge in the Pharma Sector. Some buying seen in Basic Materials, Healthcare, Industrials, Auto, Utilities, and Capital Goods.
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