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Silver Pretty, Silver Ugly

July 14, 2015

Stay tuned for Gary Christenson on the weekend show. He will be joining us to elaborate and chat about the precious metals.

Click here to visit Gary’s website to stay up to date on his articles.

The big picture in simple terms:

  • US national debt is huge, ugly, unpayable, and accelerating higher.
  • Silver Eagles are pretty and are priced low.
  • Silver prices will increase erratically, driven higher by a devalued dollar, along with increasing debt.
  • Silver is currently at the low end of the silver to national debt ratio.
  • Silver is currently at an 81 month cycle low.

Examine the next two graphs:

SI to ND

 

Silver

The above log scale chart of silver prices shows important lows in 1995, 2001, 2008, and 2015, all about 81 months apart.

It also shows that silver prices exponentially increased to higher highs from 2001 to 2011 and corrected thereafter.

But national debt has increased exponentially since 1971 about 9% per year and about 10% per year since October 2008.  Silver prices have erratically increased from $1.39 in 1971 to nearly $50 in April 2011 and have fallen to about $16.00 today.  The increase in national debt parallels price increases in crude oil, postage, food, cigarettes, many consumer goods, and silver.

Since the US government can only pay for entitlements and a few other government functions with current revenues, the interest on the national debt plus excess expenditures must be borrowed every year.  Expect borrow and spend politicians to increase debt until they can’t.

That increased debt will drive silver prices higher, along with most other consumer prices.

But the ugly truth, as I see it, is:

  1. Silver prices must be constrained or gold prices will accelerate higher.
  1. Gold prices must be constrained or investors, hedge funds, and other governments will realize the dollar is structurally weak and could accelerate lower.
  1. The dollar must be supported or the $100 Trillion bond market will accelerate lower. The 30+ year bull market in bonds could reverse at any moment and a weak dollar, among several others, could be the pin that pops the bond bubble.
  1. The bond bubble must be supported or $500+ Trillion in interest rate derivatives might accelerate lower, crash major banks, and freeze the global financial system making the 2008 crash look like a 4th of July picnic.
  1. Given that silver mining is tiny, less than $20 Billion annually, and silver prices are largely set on the paper COMEX market, constraining silver prices is both possible and relatively easy for the High Frequency Traders, major banks (such as JP Morgan), and central banks. As long as the financial and political elite are able to constrain silver prices, and it remains in their best interest to do so, silver prices will languish at unrealistically low prices.

But the day will come when silver prices can be constrained no longer, or the silver shorts cannot deliver their promised silver, or a major bank will force the silver market far higher.  When that day comes, the silver market, like the national debt, will exponentially increase again.

WHEN?

  1. The silver chart shows an 81 month cycle bottoming about now. Perhaps silver is poised to rally.
  2. Greece and the Euro are under stress. A sovereign debt or derivative crisis looks more probable every day.  The consequences could be ugly for the global bond market and beneficial to silver prices.
  3. Puerto Rico owes $73 Billion in unpayable debt, but the related derivative contracts are far higher. This will produce more ugly consequences.
  4. The world will eventually realize that Greece, Puerto Rico, Italy, Spain, and the United States are not dissimilar in terms of their excessive debt and inability to repay that debt. The global bond market is vulnerable because sovereign debts will never be paid, merely rolled over.
  5. In the words of the IMF describing Greek debt and potential repayment, “these new financing needs render the debt dynamics unsustainable.” “Unsustainable” suggests the sovereign debt market and borrow and spend countries are about to “hit the wall” and burst into flames.
  6. Silver and gold could begin a massive rally at any time, but the High Frequency Traders and central banks will attempt to restrain prices.
  7. When central bankers face collapse of the currency and bond bubbles, a silver price rally will seem unimportant compared to the consequences of a dollar and bond market collapse.

CONCLUSIONS:

  • National debt will increase. Silver prices will also increase, probably soon.
  • Silver prices are currently low as shown by historical ratios with gold, the S&P, and national debt.
  • Expect silver prices to rally based on fundamentals, systemic stress, and investor demand. Expect silver prices to be constrained by the financial and political elite, as long as they are able.
  • Expect higher prices for silver in the year and decade ahead.
  • Stack silver. It is healthy for your retirement and financial well-being.

 

Discussion
27 Comments
    Jul 14, 2015 14:42 AM

    Lower lows, lower highs – don’t get much more bearish then that.

      Dan
      Jul 14, 2015 14:10 AM

      well…to me the longer we go with lower lows and lower highs the more bullish we get?

        Dan
        Jul 14, 2015 14:10 AM

        we…should be replaced with I

          Dan
          Jul 14, 2015 14:11 AM

          the last we should be replaced with I 🙂

            Jul 14, 2015 14:18 AM

            What about that question mark at the end of your sentence?

            Dan
            Jul 14, 2015 14:26 AM

            LOL…no I like it…. but seriously…the worse a chart looks from upper left to lower right the more interested i am as at the least a mean reversion is in store or at best a new bull market begins!

            Jul 14, 2015 14:04 PM

            good thoughts Dan. I’ll get more bullish the low the lows get as well, so you can change the I back to a we, and I’ll through in question mark as a high five?

            Jul 14, 2015 14:06 PM

            the “lower” the lows get…..

            I’ll “throw” (that one was as auto-correct) in the question mark….?

            Dan
            Jul 14, 2015 14:41 PM

            thanks Shad…. high five right back at ya’

      Dan
      Jul 14, 2015 14:26 AM

      LOL…no I like it…. but seriously…the worse a chart looks from upper left to lower right the more interested i am as at the least a mean reversion is in store or at best a new bull market begins! 🙂

    Jul 14, 2015 14:43 AM

    Good article (especially the section on “the ugly truth”)- thanks for posting Cory.

    Jul 14, 2015 14:46 AM

    Mr. Christenson..thank you for the article..my only disagreement is the time frame..I don’t see advances in metals anytime soon, in fact not in my lifetime although that may not be long….prices will languish until the bankers are broke and gone..until then the metals will remain in the basement…just my opinion based on watching this fiasco for 4 years….

      Jul 14, 2015 14:08 PM

      “…. in fact not in my lifetime although that may not be long….”

      Are you OK Gator? Take care of yourself man. We want you around with Silver finally does start a new bull market. Cheers!

    Jul 14, 2015 14:53 AM

    How tight a leash does Obama have on Netanyahu? Sounds like Israel will be bringing forward their plans to bomb Iran’s nuclear facilities?

      CFS
      Jul 14, 2015 14:20 AM

      I don’t believe Israel has the capability.
      The U.s. Has not sold it bunker busters to Israel and even if it did Israel does not have a plane capable of carrying that heavy a bomb.
      This leaves only a nuclear attack capable of destroying the Iranian facility and I only see that happening in extremis. Maybe after Iran’s first nuclear test.

        Jul 14, 2015 14:22 AM

        Israel has over 5,000 bunker buster bombs but, yes, logistically it would be very difficult for them to attack. However, Israel and Saudi would make unusual bed-fellows with a common enemy.

          Jul 14, 2015 14:55 AM

          5000 bunker buster bombs……………..that would be about 1000 per , bombs for banker busting.

    Jul 14, 2015 14:56 AM

    Silver is a monetary,strategic and industrial metal currently Comex priced below the cost of production. Now it is a matter of when the banksters let it go so they profit.

      Jul 14, 2015 14:16 AM

      I was buying silver at current price 7-8 years ago. Now everything is much more expensive and silver has made a round trip. It is cheap at this price, it is so cheap it is below the production cost a lot. It was above production cost 7-8 years ago though. If you cannot produce it at profit, it is better to shut your plant down. Even better, cheaper price makes people use the product more. Supply destruction and demand increase is perfect recipe for higher price. COMEX can suppress the price for a while but not forever. Silver cannot be printed.

        Jul 14, 2015 14:20 PM

        Ditto Lawrence

        Dan
        Jul 14, 2015 14:42 PM

        nice post lawrence! 🙂

        Jul 14, 2015 14:27 PM

        Lawrence, you are a guy who loves the oil business. As you know, the Tar Sands are operating at a loss in many cases even as they keep extracting oil at current prices. Down in the US, fracker’s and drillers are going bust as the cost of drawing out gas exceeds what they can get at market prices. Meanwhile, copper is being mined in Chile at a subsidy, gold is being extracted in South Africa below operating and over in Australia iron ores are still being mined even during one of the most serious price declines in history such that we can expect namkruptcies unless the global growth picture improves.

        Comex does not have any input on those other stories. This is a global event we are witnessing and precious metals are just part of the bigger picture where many commodities are still in decline despite the costs of mining.

        Even wheat and corn up until very recently had alarming losses built into them for some farmers due to the depths prices had fallen. These problems can only be cured by a worldwide contraction in supply or a change in the outlook for demand.

        The bloodbath phase for the resource sector is not yet here but it will be bringing bankruptcies to the industry at almost all levels, not the least of which is gold and silver miners.

        Bu they are hardly alone.

          Jul 14, 2015 14:29 PM

          namkruptcies should have been written as bankruptcies of course.

          I am sure you knew that.

          Jul 14, 2015 14:38 PM

          It will happen. a lot will be bankrupt and other will be purchased by bankers. But no one can afford loss for a long time. Bankers will not buy mines if they cannot produce profit in the future. Take alberta for example, we already stopped drilling and cancelled all oil sand projects. This is all future production. US drill rig count has dropped from 1600 to 600 and production peaked in April. Base metals were grossly over produced with huge increase in production every year. Now it is moment of truth. Thanks for mentioning these. There will be spike in PM and Oil price.

            Jul 14, 2015 14:00 PM

            Yup…they will no doubt move together along with most of the resource sector as the rotation out of inflated assets begins. If only we knew when. But Only God and Goldman have the answer to that question.

        Jul 15, 2015 15:08 AM

        BINGORAMA….Lawrence!!!!!!!!

    Jul 14, 2015 14:00 AM

    cfs…. where do you get yr info from..??Israel has the capacity & more