Silver - Strategic metal of the 2020s

Silver has risen to the spotlight through WSB’s short squeeze episodes, and now especially on Twitter, the hashtag #silversqueeze has emerged strongly. I myself have been looking into silver and silver producers more closely over the past year, and here is my own view on the potential of that market.

Silver is thus a precious metal whose main use, in addition to investment demand, is currently in electronics, but also in medicine, photography, solar panels, and jewelry. Silver is especially seen to be used in tomorrow’s green technologies, e.g., in electric cars and perhaps increasingly also in batteries. Add to the mix negative real interest rates, which compete with precious metals sitting in vaults for market share; in this competition, precious metals can fare well against “non-yielding risk”.

Long-term fundamentals:

  • In 2020, the supply of physical silver was the smallest it has been in a decade.

  • Silver production has been consistently in deficit in recent years, despite increasing global demand.

  • Silver is mainly a byproduct in mining. There have also been no strong incentives to enter the industry, as silver production was often economically unprofitable due to low prices over the last decade. Increasing production will be a very slow process and will require several years.

  • From a fundamental perspective, the investment thesis is solid; demand can easily be expected to grow, while supply is inelastic and will take its time to respond to that.

Why silver? Because silver moves, like other commodities, very cyclically, but especially with gold during secular changes. While stocks, real estate prices, etc., move during economic growth and the business cycle, precious metals have historically performed excellently during fiat currency depreciation, political risks, war, and revolutions. The correlation of precious metals with other asset classes is also quite low, which is why the mantra “everyone should own precious metals” is familiar to many investors. More details behind the link.

But why am I writing this message right now. For years, there has been speculation around precious metals markets that policymakers and large banks would try to keep their prices in check through derivatives markets. This argument has also gained traction in recent years, and actors like JPM and Deutsche have received slaps on the wrist.

Having followed the precious metals market with a closer focus for less than a year, I became convinced of the possibility of that price suppression and jumped in with the belief that this could be coming to an end. After the pandemic, physical precious metals have faced “doomsday” demand, and people have demanded physical product to be delivered from COMEX instead of derivative contracts, rather than rolling over delivery as has been customary. For example, in 2020, during the silver delivery months of April, June, and August, more silver was delivered from COMEX to customers than in 2016-2019 combined. A certain Paul Volcker also commented in relation to the inflation of the 1970s that allowing the price of gold to rise was probably a mistake. Precious metals correlate very strongly with real interest rates and the money supply. Adjusting the tightness of one’s tinfoil hat, everyone can then investigate why, in such an environment, precious metals have not yet moved further, despite immense demand.


Currently, silver is still priced through derivatives, of which there are at least several hundred times more in circulation per unit of physical silver. I have been hoping that at some point, that pricing mechanism would shift from paper-based metal pricing towards supply-demand pricing of the physical product. Currently, I am even more convinced of this.

This #silversqueeze movement has driven people to buy physical silver in large volumes in a very short time. Around the world, precious metals dealers have faced a truly significant surge in demand, and several reports have already been seen of the product completely running out. At the same time, other silver-linked instruments, such as the silver ETF SLV, faced its largest purchases in history on Friday, equivalent to 1150 tons of silver purchases in a single day. This dynamic naturally puts pressure on acquiring the product, which is already in short supply.

What has not been discussed in this regard, and what I consider most significant, however, is the pressure this trend places on industrial players. For manufacturers of products expected to have high demand in the future (electric cars, solar panels, electronics), it is of primary importance to secure the availability of essential materials. This puts pressure on large industrial players to make decisions to secure that, with price being secondary. A few months ago, an example of a possible future development was seen when Tesla partnered with a lithium company.

There would still be more to say, e.g., about large silver short positions, which amount to 180 days’ worth of global silver production, and the current large premiums for physical product, which are also positive drivers for the price, but let’s cut it short here. However, there is a strong belief that this movement could turn out to be much more significant than it initially appears.

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Since you brought up WSB, let me just point out that there, this silver squeeze is considered a coordinated distraction to take attention away from GME.


premarket is making a gap up - the chart shows how unusual the opening will be - to the moon?

  • after 27.39, the next resistance level is 31.41 from 2013
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Yeah, I’ve been following it. I brought that up because that’s precisely why the matter is now on the table at all. The precious metals believers brought this up at a really bad time for GME, but they saw an obvious opportunity to draw attention to this mechanism, and they succeeded.

It’s certainly possible that the WSB guys have significant amounts invested in GameStop, Nokia, AMC, etc., and thus have an interest in keeping the main focus on these stocks instead of silver.

The fact that many of the silver posts on WSB have come from new accounts could again be due to silver bugs not being as much of a Reddit user base as the pumpers of the aforementioned stocks. In addition, people have been urged on Twitter (e.g., Gold Ventures) to create Reddit accounts and comment to get more attention for silver.

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Here’s a good, albeit slightly incomplete, overview from Twitter user Stokdog, mainly of companies involved with silver. Practically, the entire sector can be considered a turnaround sector to some extent, which has been squeezed by scarce financing, and many producers have been making losses before last year. Sotkamo Silver is an excellent example of a turnaround company that, after consuming all financing, can transform into a good cash flow machine.

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An apt description. I’ve been following these guys on Twitter for a longer time, and they’ve now really started to pump and drive this. Of course, they are trying to push their own agenda since they are overweight in these, but it’s also easy to understand why they would go for it when the opportunity presents itself. Many have been sitting with metals or metal miners for several years watching the rest of the market surge alongside them, so the light at the end of the tunnel is attractive. :smiley:

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Beware! There seems to be a major scam underway. This weekend, a huge number of fake accounts like this one have appeared on Twitter: https://twitter.com/SvdHijden. And as we know, Wall Street Bets is not involved in this.

It looks like a proper astroturfing pump-and-dump is happening!

I take it back. Based on LinkedIn, it seems like that might even be a real account, whose owner is, to say the least, a passionate silver stacker…

Well, that linked account certainly didn’t appear over the weekend, “joined 2015” :joy:

It seems to be producing effective spam though

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Your messages are, after all, pretty rookie numbers compared to, for example, Gold Ventures’ tweet storm, which fires off several messages per hour.

Hey, SLV’s rise doesn’t happen without a reason. Now I would really hope for a knowledge-based perspective – I think @F-loader has made a good fact-based point.

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On the macro side, silver is predicted to have an excellent decade. Metals in general are a perfect investment to counter the great inflation of money reserves. In such a macro environment, silver is most likely one of the fastest horses in the race.

I largely agree with @F-loader’s groundwork. However, the increase in silver production may be more elastic than many estimate. Additionally, investing in silver is not suitable for short-term investors; a time horizon of at least 3-5 years is recommended. The current WSB (fake?) hype could at worst lead to price distortions and weak-handed investors, which will hinder price discovery in the coming years.

Edit: Based on what I’ve heard from precious metals experts (e.g., Rick Rule, Mike Maloney, David Morgan), I consider it highly unlikely that the price of silver can be significantly pushed upwards. There are such gigantic sharks and masters of manipulation in the COMEX markets. $50 is probably the maximum in the short term, but it would otherwise be a valid price level over some time horizon. (Let’s see if this estimate ages poorly - the rules of the financial world are being shaken up quite vigorously now. Keep the popcorn ready.)

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This is mainly about silver investors seeing the power of the wsb community and, as opportunists, seizing the opportunity, as they feel the same mechanics can affect the silver market.

Understandably, the timing of this pump and all the other questionable aspects surrounding the GameStop trading make already skeptical Reddit investors suspect this is also an attack against them.

Posts concerning silver have been removed from r/wallstreetbets to keep the focus on the currently most relevant names. Regarding silver, there is a dedicated section on Reddit with a rather pertinent post about this.
https://www.reddit.com/r/Wallstreetsilver/comments/la2ha4/attention_wsb_silver_fuders_stop_posting/

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Heh, during the corona crash, my portfolio dropped at its worst by -9% in a day. Today +12.5%. Hopefully the price of silver will hold. Even without this hype, silver should have a bright future.

Yeah, this somehow smells like a quick pump-and-dump today. For example, a page and Twitter account like this appeared out of nowhere yesterday:

https://silversqueezenews.com/

https://twitter.com/comtrader2

Note: I’m not saying anything about silver as a long-term investment, because I don’t know much about it. It might be good. But what we’re seeing today seems like organized astroturfing to me.

If you’re interested in silver, a good overview of the market can be found by reading the Silver Institute’s World Silver Survey:

There’s an exceptional amount of misinformation circulating in the silver/gold market, so please be careful whose information you trust. If it’s a YouTube channel hyping up an upcoming metal rally, it’s ninety-nine times out of a hundred complete garbage. Even the opening post of this thread is misleading in places, in my opinion.

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Well, I’m learning about this stuff by experience since I jumped in hyped up. There have been some pretty quick and surprising course changes today. Does anyone have previous experience day trading with silver? Is it usually this much of a rollercoaster?

If one is genuinely long on precious metals, is there any point in investing in paper silver other than for trading purposes? If the alternative is a real physical piece of precious metal.

That physical piece currently costs about +50% over spot. So it’s definitely not worth buying.