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Silver Price At Historical Extremes Compared To Oil And Stocks

October 14, 2014

Official national debt has increased from roughly one-third of a $ Trillion in 1964 to nearly $18 Trillion today. The price of a barrel of crude oil has increased from about $1.50 to about $90 over the past 50 years. A pack of cigarettes has increased from a quarter to nearly $6. There are 1,001 more examples of increasing prices, often not matched by increases in personal incomes.

Consumer prices have broadly increased with some price rises far exceeding others – college tuition and healthcare come to mind. Also bonuses on Wall Street have been outstanding.

Examine the following graph of silver divided by crude oil. They increase together on average, but silver currently looks inexpensive compared to crude oil. Expect silver to rise in price more rapidly than crude oil.

silver vs crude oil 1985 2014 gold silver price news

Examine the graph of (100 times) silver divided by the S&P 500 Index. The attractiveness of financial assets (S&P) varies widely compared to the need for hard assets such as silver and gold. Note that the ratio has dropped from over 3 to less than 1 in the past 3 years. Expect silver to rally substantially compared to the S&P.

silver vs SP 1985 2014 gold silver price news

Do you expect the emphasis upon warfare and welfare to change? Do you expect fewer dollars to be created? Do you expect central banks will self-destruct by allowing interest rates to rise and/or deflationary forces to overwhelm the economy?

An accident where the financial elite are hurt more than the masses could happen but it seems like an unlikely scenario. Hence, as with the past 50 years, expect more currency in circulation, much more debt, higher consumer prices, more warfare, and more welfare.

Further, expect the prices for silver and gold to increase relative to the S&P, and expect silver prices to increase more rapidly than the price of crude oil.

Inevitable? Certainly not, but the best overall predictor of future prices, future policies, and future wars seems to be the long term trends shown by past prices, policies, and wars.

Unless (until) something unlikely and world changing occurs, we should expect:

  • More warfare
  • More welfare
  • Increasing consumer prices
  • More debt
  • More government statistics proving everything is wonderful in election years
  • More volatility, anxiety, worry, and concern over markets, ebola, war, the NSA, which insider will purchase the presidency etc.
  • More gold and silver coins sold to Americans and Europeans who increasingly distrust paper assets.
  • More gold and silver purchases by Asian individuals and governments who increasingly distrust paper assets.
  • More talk-talk on financial TV about the great stock buying opportunities available in 2014, 2015, 2016, and through 2030.

Silver is currently inexpensive compared to the S&P 500 Index, crude oil, the size and rate of increase of the national debt, and especially the future price for silver after markets have reset, paper assets have devalued, and hard assets have jumped much higher in price.

Examine the following graph of weekly silver prices since 1994. Based on the stochastic index and the disparity index (and many more such indicators that are not shown) silver prices are ready to rally. The black vertical lines are spaced 5.75 years apart and they show significant lows in silver prices in 1997, 2003, 2008, and about now. Guarantee? No! Probability? Yes!

silver price 1994 2014 gold silver price news

 

Gary Christenson – Click to the here to visit The Deviant Investor website

Discussion
10 Comments
    Oct 14, 2014 14:01 AM

    Wish I can see a Graph of silver price vs production cost. It must be extreme as well.

    bb
    Oct 14, 2014 14:19 AM

    Lawrence, that would be interesting, a list of primary silver mines (not that many) and their all in costs for an once.

    I have a hunch a copper or zinc miner might figure silver to be a bonus.

    Oct 14, 2014 14:16 AM

    wow!!! Whays up with stocks and metals ?? I am looking at major blue chips , but am not willing to pull trigger yet. midterms uncertain , plus worrys about ebola, mideast ukraine , etc. Independants gaining in midterm as voters reject both major partys . love to all S

    Oct 14, 2014 14:32 AM

    Try dividing the gross world product by the real above ground supply of silver bullion. .999 fine investment grade silver bullion that is. By that measure silver is unjustifiably dirt cheap.

      Oct 14, 2014 14:17 PM

      Steven…..silver dirt cheap !!!!!…..That’s why I keep telling people to buy.

        Oct 14, 2014 14:32 PM

        I just don’t see why these miners are all losing money for the benefit of their manipulators. Sooner or later, they have to close. I am selling them if silver price stays this low since they will be taken over by Wall Street at bancruptcy price.

          Oct 15, 2014 15:09 AM

          If the futures market has for the time being exclusive rights to set the price of metals then miners have 2 choices. Mine silver until they go out of business or shut down. They are probably carrying on in hopes that things will get better and I don’t think they will get better until the market price setting mechanism as we know it is overthrown for good.

    CFS
    Oct 15, 2014 15:28 AM

    It is fairly obvious that silver is cheap by most strandards.
    It is not obvious, however, that it will immediately rise in price.
    It may rise in price and then dip back down prior to a major rise, or it may bump along this bottom in price for a few years before its rise to over-priced at $30, $40, $50….

    CFS
    Oct 15, 2014 15:39 AM

    In the absence of harveyorgan .blogspot.com which has been killed, ther nexty best blog is probably:
    http://www.tfmetalsreport.com/comment/440079