Silver reversed
sharply higher over the past week or so, surging dramatically. This
was just after it had successfully retested major secular lows,
ramping the odds this strong buying is the vanguard of a
long-overdue major new upleg. As usual, silver?s coming gains will
be fueled by gold?s own advance. As the yellow metal mean reverts
higher initially on heavy futures short covering, capital will flock
back to silver.
Silver is a
fascinating market. It?s undeniably primarily an industrial metal,
as the latest annual data from the world?s leading authority on
silver supply and demand shows. The venerable Silver Institute
reports that fully 54% of global silver demand in 2013, and 62% in
2012, was for industrial fabrication. In those same years,
worldwide investment demand (coins, bars, ETFs) accounted for just
23% and 20% respectively.
Nevertheless, for
millennia silver has also attracted investors as a precious metal
and governments as a hard currency. From time to time silver
captivates investors again, and they flood into this relatively tiny
market and bid silver prices sharply higher. These large
investment-demand spikes quickly overwhelm the normally-dominant
industrial demand, which is naturally slow to change. So silver is
catapulted higher.
The magnitude of
these investment-driven silver surges can be enormous, multiplying
fortunes rapidly. The greatest ones are the stuff of legend, and
have left silver with something of a cult following. This volatile
metal is always being watched by contrarian investors, who are ready
to return when it starts running again. And there is a single
overwhelmingly-dominant catalyst that brings investors running back.
The price of gold.
Almost without exception, all of silver?s biggest and strongest
spikes, uplegs, and bull markets in modern history have been fueled
by parallel gold rallies. From an investment perspective, silver is
ultimately just a leveraged play on gold. If you want to
mischievously provoke hardcore silver zealots, call silver ?gold?s
little lapdog?. Silver investment demand is almost totally
dependent on gold?s fortunes.
The historical
data proves this in spades, it is unassailable.
Gold drives
silver, full stop. Silver prices are super-highly-correlated
with gold prices over any reasonable period of time. Silver?s
rallies, uplegs, and bull markets correspond almost exactly with
gold?s rallies, uplegs, and bull markets. Investors return to
silver when gold is strong, and abandon silver when gold is weak.
Gold is the key to silver investment demand.
This is true even
over the past couple years, which have been extraordinarily
anomalous. Way back in late 2012, the US Federal Reserve launched
its wildly-unprecedented open-ended
third
quantitative-easing campaign. Nothing like QE3 had ever
happened before, and it along with high Fed officials? associating
jawboning epically distorted the stock markets. QE3 is what drove
the past couple years? levitation.
The Fed?s direct
QE3 Treasury monetizing held interest rates artificially low. This
enabled corporations to borrow over a trillion dollars very
cheaply, which they used to buy back their own stocks. These
vast buybacks greatly boosted the broader stocks markets.
Meanwhile, the Fed kept implying to stock traders that it was
backstopping these anomalous markets, ready to ramp up QE3?s size to
arrest any material selloff.
Thus the Fed?s QE3
campaign radically altered investor sentiment and capital flows.
Everyone wanted to buy high in
overvalued,
overextended,
and euphoric stock markets. The Fed hypnotized traders into
believing stock markets only rise, that there was no significant
downside risk. And as stocks surged, demand for alternative
investments that move contrary to stock markets like gold and silver
collapsed.
Since nothing like
QE3 had ever happened before, the resulting bear-market slide in
precious-metals prices is also largely unparalleled. This first
chart looks at silver and gold prices over the past couple years or
so, the era of the Fed?s QE3 stock-market levitation. And even in
one of the most extreme and artificial environments imaginable for
silver investment demand, silver prices still mirrored gold?s nearly
perfectly.
Statisticians
measure data correlations through a construct known as the
coefficient of determination. It?s also called R squared, because
it is calculated by multiplying the correlation coefficient,
symbolized as R, by itself. I bastardize this to r-square, as it
flows better in writing. R-square effectively reveals how much
movement in one dataset is directly mathematically related to
movement in another dataset.
Since the dawn of
2013 when the Fed?s epic QE3 anomaly got underway, silver and gold
have had a correlation r-square of 94.7%! That means nearly 95%
of silver?s daily price action is directly explainable by gold?s
daily price action, or vice versa. And there?s zero doubt about the
direction of causality, gold is driving silver and not the other way
around. This truth isn?t evident in a chart, it comes from
experience.
I?ve been
investing for decades, but have spent the last 15 years or so
intensely focused as a dedicated student of the markets. In
addition to endless research, data-crunching, and writing, a
critical part of this is watching the markets all day everyday.
When you spend all those years observing how prices react in
real-time, causality becomes readily apparent. While many things
move gold prices, only one really moves silver.
Like silver, gold
prices are affected by shifting sentiment that alters investment and
speculation demand. Major catalysts for this range from
stock-market fortunes, to how the US dollar is faring, to releases
of major US economic data, to a wide range of publications and
comments by the Federal Reserve and its officials. The large gold
market moves first when sentiment shifts, then the small
silver market follows.
This reaction is
usually rapid, happening within minutes when gold moves
significantly. And as long as that gold trend lasts, hours, days,
weeks, months, even years, silver tends to mirror and amplify gold?s
price action. Silver surges when gold is strong, and slumps when
gold is weak. In a very real sense, silver is a gold sentiment
gauge. Investors and speculators only flood into it when they
are bullish on gold.
When gold
plummeted in the second quarter of 2013 first on
panic selling
as major multi-year support failed then later on the Fed?s QE3-taper
scare, silver plummeted with it. When gold surged sharply on
heavy short
covering in the third quarter of 2013, silver surged right along
with it. This decades-old trading pattern continued last year,
silver dutifully rallying with gold and selling off with gold like
always.
Whether you look
at the past couple years
or four decades,
gold fuels silver. And within the Fed?s extreme QE3 anomaly
since early 2013, which is starting to unwind, almost 95% of
silver?s daily price action was directly explainable by gold?s own.
This is stunning, as it necessarily means everything else is
in the remaining 5%! Just think of the endless commentaries written
on silver, ex-gold they?re barely material.
Because of gold
price action?s overwhelmingly-dominant impact on silver sentiment
among investors and speculators, gold trumps everything else
silver-related. This includes worldwide silver supply-and-demand
fundamentals, silver technicals, even silver conspiracy theories.
If you want to multiply your capital in silver by buying it low then
later selling it high, all that really matters is what gold is going
to do.
Back in early
November 2014, silver collapsed to a brutal 4.7-year low of $15.37.
The Fed?s crazy stock-market levitation had gutted demand for all
alternative investments, they were starving for capital and rotting
into oblivion. Then just a couple weeks ago, silver slumped again
to $15.48. This was less than 1% above that secular low. But
silver?s low retest proved successful thanks to gold?s subsequent
sharp surge.
In these
grossly-distorted markets of the past couple years, the lion?s share
of big moves have been driven by the Fed. Its Federal Open Market
Committee that manipulates interest rates and prints money meets 8
times a year, and its latest decision was just released on March
18th. And again the Yellen Fed pulled out all the stops to portray
itself as dovish, signaling that rate hikes were likely to be
delayed and gradual.
The US dollar,
which had been
rocketing parabolic on rate-hike hopes, collapsed on that. This
helped ignite a sharp gold rally as futures speculators scrambled to
cover extreme shorts. And naturally as gold surged, silver joined
it. Over four trading days starting on that FOMC meeting, gold
powered 3.7% higher which silver really amplified to a big 9.8%
gain. And I suspect that gold-fueled silver buying is only
beginning.
With the Fed?s
stock-market levitation seducing investors away, the gold price
action in the past couple years has been
totally dominated
by American futures speculators. When they sell aggressively,
gold tanks. When they buy aggressively, gold surges. And since
their selling has been so extreme in the past couple of months, they
have big near-term buying left to do which will catapult gold and
therefore silver higher.
This next chart
looks at American speculators? total positions in gold-futures
contracts, both long-side bullish bets and short-side bearish ones.
This data is published once a week by the CFTC in its famous
Commitments of Traders reports. The latest read before this essay
was published reflected these bets as of Tuesday March 17th. And
boy were they bullish for gold, which portends a major parallel
silver rally.
After its deep
early-November secular low, gold was doing really well heading into
early 2015. By late January it had powered 14.2% higher to $1303.
But then for reasons including the surging US stock markets and US
dollar, American futures speculators started to aggressively dump
gold. This is readily apparent in this chart, in the recent sharp
drop in long-side contracts and sharp rise in short-side ones.
Between late
January and this latest CoT report, this single group of traders
liquidated an astounding 79.4k long-side contracts. Since each
contract controls 100 ounces of gold, this is equivalent to 247.0
metric tons! That is far too much gold supply too quickly for
normal gold investment demand to absorb, so gold prices started
crumbling. This heavy selling forced speculators? total bullish
bets back under support.
And futures
speculators also simultaneously piled on to the short side,
exacerbating gold?s sharp selloff. Between early February and this
latest CoT report, they sold short 75.8k contracts! They were
effectively borrowing gold they didn?t have, dumping it into the
market, and hoping to buy it back later at some lower price to repay
their debts. This extreme shorting added the equivalent of
another 235.8t of gold supply.
Add that up, and
in just 6 to 7 weeks American futures speculators alone spewed an
astounding 482.9t of gold into the markets! It?s actually an
incredible testimony to the strength of latent gold investment
demand that this metal didn?t just collapse under such a brutal
onslaught. According to the World Gold Council, in all of 2014
global gold investment demand ran 904.6t. Over half of that
supplied in weeks is staggering.
Gold only fell
11.8% on that deluge of futures supply, and silver was very
resilient with a mere 15.2% loss of its own. Usually silver really
leverages gold?s downside too. Silver is looking so bullish today
because this extreme gold-futures selling is reversing into
buying. We?ve already seen that start since that latest FOMC
meeting, which happened to come the very next day after this latest
CoT positions data.
The ironic thing
about futures speculators, who are considered very sophisticated
traders, is they are terribly wrong as a herd at extremes.
They are the most bearish right as prices are low and bottoming, as
evidenced by high short positions and low long positions. This
chart highlights short peaks in red, and all of them occurred when
gold was in the process of bottoming right before a major new
rally got underway.
While futures
speculators have no obligation to reestablish long positions, they
are legally required to cover their shorts. The past couple months?
big gold-futures shorting binge was one of the most extreme ever
witnessed from a variety of metrics. That left speculators with a
whopping 146.2k gold-futures contracts they had borrowed and sold,
one of the highest levels in history. These must soon be reversed.
Futures
speculation is a radically-riskier endeavor than stock trading. Not
only is it a zero-sum game where every dollar won is a direct dollar
lost by an opposing trader, but the leverage available is far beyond
extreme. The maintenance margin for a single gold-futures contract
controlling 100 ounces of gold worth $120,000 at $1200 is merely
$4000. That means traders? leverage can run
as high as 30 to 1!
30x leverage is
terrifying, as a mere 3.3% move against a futures bet supported by
minimum margin will wipe out 100% of a trader?s capital risked. In
the stock markets, leverage has been legally limited to just 2x
since 1974. Whenever gold started rallying again, which happened in
spades after that latest FOMC meeting, these futures speculators
would be forced to cover or face catastrophic losses of their
capital.
The only way to
cover futures shorts is to buy offsetting long contracts to
close them. The upside price impact of adding new longs and buying
longs to cover shorts is identical. So all the extreme gold-futures
short selling of recent months would soon reverse into major
buying. And given how high speculators? total short bets were, the
subsequent buying was guaranteed to be big. This chart helps
understand why.
The Fed?s
anomalous stock-market levitation sparked such extreme short selling
that gold suffered its worst quarter in 93 years in Q2?13!
Those initial lows around $1200 have essentially held in all of the
subsequent speculator gold-futures shorting spikes since. After
each shorting binge, speculators were quick to cover and push their
bearish bets back down to support. That?s where their exposure
wasn?t excessive.
Today that
speculator short-position support line is around 60k contracts, or
75k if you want to consider support in horizontal terms. Merely to
return to these normal levels, American speculators will have to buy
to cover either 86.2k or 71.2k contracts in a matter of weeks to
months on the outside. This is the equivalent of 268.2t or 221.5t
of gold, both enormous amounts! This will certainly catapult gold
sharply higher.
Now remember the
latest CoT data by the time this essay was published was as of the
afternoon before that latest FOMC meeting ignited this inevitable
gold-futures short covering. So some fraction of this has already
happened. But we?re only a week into a process that has generally
taken a couple months to unfold after the other major shorting peaks
of the past couple years. So this gold-futures buying is far from
over.
Gold rallied
pretty dramatically in the past short-covering frenzies, despite
still facing howling headwinds in the form of the levitating US
stock markets and the US dollar shooting parabolic. As this latest
short-covering episode gets underway, these are shifting to
tailwinds as the euphoric US stock markets and US dollar weaken. So
this next gold rally initially sparked by futures short covering is
likely to grow much larger.
Not only will
other futures speculators pile in to chase gold?s upside with new
long-side bets, but legions of investors will return via gold ETFs
and physical bullion. And as gold powers higher, silver is going to
leverage its gains like usual. The first chart illustrated that
silver is super-highly-correlated with gold, and mirrors and
amplifies its moves. And the second one shows that gold is in for a
major short-covering rally.
So with big
gold buying fueling silver, the white metal is likely early on
in its next major upleg. Investors and speculators alike can
capitalize on silver?s next big move in several ways. They can go
the traditional route and buy silver coins and bars. Stock traders
can deploy capital in the silver ETFs to obtain the same portfolio
exposure. These are led by the flagship iShares Silver Trust, which
trades under the symbol SLV.
But silver itself
and the silver ETFs will merely pace silver?s advance at best.
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beaten-down silver stocks. Since silver has fallen so deeply out of
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The bottom line is
silver looks to be embarking on a major new upleg, as it just
reversed sharply higher after a successful retest of major secular
lows. This initial strong silver buying was fueled by major short
covering in gold futures, a multi-month process that?s likely just
getting underway. Silver sentiment has always been highly dependent
on gold?s fortunes, since traders overwhelmingly focus on it to time
silver moves.
Over the anomalous
past couple years where markets were grossly distorted by the Fed,
almost 95% of silver?s daily price action was directly explained by
gold?s own. This gold dominance of silver will likely continue as
the Fed starts normalizing policy, reversing the market extremes it
spawned. So as the gold price mean reverts higher, investors and
speculators will flood back into silver and ultimately catapult it
to huge gains.
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