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Abstract: Over the course of the present
bull market in silver and gold, probably another 10 years, silver should rise
about four times as fast as gold. That forecast arises from
silver’s historic performance, especially during the 20th century, as
well as its present fundamentals. The best way to profit from that
trend is to swap back and forth from silver to gold with the rise and fall in
the gold/silver ratio. That strategy will convert a sterile investment
into one that pays dividends, and possibly double the ounces you own over the
life of the bull market.
GOLD vs. SILVER
Alas, poor silver is the Rodney Dangerfield of precious
metals – it can’t get no respect. It certainly
should merit respect, since its 20th century performance has far outpaced
gold. It’s volatility and superior fundamentals ought to make it
much more attractive than gold.
The fact is, gold bugs (with their blind,
monomaniacal devotion to gold) miss the point. They are so
ideologically wedded to the yellow metal that they overlook both history and
facts. It is not a monometallic gold standard that history
overwhelmingly demonstrates, but bimetallism. Shortly after I wrote Silver
Bonanza for Jim Blanchard in 1993 but before it had been published, Jim
teased this gem out of Nobel Laureate economist Milton Friedman:
“The major monetary metal in history is silver, not gold.”
(I remember it well because the statement struck Jim so strongly that he had
it printed up on a sticker and inserted it on the flyleaf of the original
8-1/2 by 11 version.) Friedman was right, of course. For most of
mankind throughout most of history, silver has been the much more important
monetary metal, familiar as the metal of daily commerce. Gold was used
only for very, very large payments, which most people make only rarely, if
ever.
Both silver and gold are monetary metals, i.e.,
they both benefit from monetary demand. (Monetary demand is also called
“investment” demand. It is demand for silver as silver,
and as an ingredient making something.) Most analysts miss
silver’s monetary demand because they focus on silver’s use in
industry. Certainly, since silver was politically demonetized
beginning in the mid 1870s a vast amount of purely monetary demand
disappeared. Today, most silver is used in fabrication, roughly split
three ways among silverware and jewellery, photographic, and other industrial
uses. But when confidence in central bank issued fiat money
begins to fade, when fear strikes investors’ hearts, they run not only
to gold, but also to silver. Especially in America.
That demand profile makes monetary demand for silver
more important, not less. Why? Because all of that
monetary demand hits silver at the margin. Fundamental demand
changes only slowly, but monetary demand comes out of nowhere, adding huge,
insistent demand for silver at the margin. Because the silver
market is so much smaller than the gold market, a new dollar invested in
silver also has a much greater affect on the price. That makes silver
more volatile than gold, which wears on your nerves but swells your profits.
Be advised, I am not arguing for investing in silver
only, but rather for a more subtle strategy. I want to show you
a way to invest in BOTH metals, swapping them back and forth at the
appropriate time, possibly doubling your return over the life of the
bull market, which is probably another 9 – 10 years.
When I began musing over this article, the
gold/silver ratio was hovering around 60 (it took 60 ounces of silver to
buy one ounce of gold). By the end of this bull move, I expect that
ratio to drop to 16:1 (16
ounces of silver will buy one ounce of silver).
In the meantime, the ratio will zig and zag, and we’ll take advantage of those moves, too,
by trading the ratio.
THE ONE GREAT SECRET OF INVESTING
There is one Great Secret of Investing that you must
not ignore: always invest with the primary trend.
Look at Chart 1, SILVER, 1963 – 2006. It offers a good
picture of a primary uptrend (“bull market”) and a primary
downtrend (“bear market”).
What is the primary trend? Like the tide in
the ocean, the primary trend is the long term -- 10 to 20 year -- move where
the general trend is up or down. Just as you wouldn’t want
to try to launch your boat against the tide, you never want to launch
your investment boat against the primary trend. Within that trend, like
waves on the tide, are zigs and zags
up and down. We can also ride these waves to profits, but must be much
more careful with them since they move so much faster. Our strategy
keeps your money invested with the tide, but takes advantage of waves on the
tide as well.
Stocks’ primary trend turned up in
1982. Without exercising a great deal of discriminating brain power,
you could have bought almost any stock in 1982 and made huge profits by
2000. How could you have helped it? Measured by the Dow Jones
Industrial Average, stocks rose 12,000% over that 18 years. A rising
tide lifts all boats, even the garbage scows.
Likewise, it makes no sense to buy stocks now.
A primary downtrend (“bear market”) commenced in 2000, and it
must work itself all the way to exhaustion. That process will take from
10 to 15 years, and not even the almighty Federal reserve creating tidal
waves of money out of thin air will keep the stock market up. The rule
of thumb says that a bear market will give up 50% to 95% of the foregoing
bull market rise. Do the math, and you will come to a Dow target of
roughly 6,000 to 1,250. Do you really want to buy stocks now, and hang
around for Dow 6,000? Or Dow 1,250?
IS SILVER IN A PRIMARY UPTREND?
First we have to answer this question: Is
silver in primary uptrend? Let’s look at the charts. Chart
2, Silver, 1998 – now, cents per ounce, shows a very long,
rounding bottom. This formation is typical of bear market bottoms, and
very reliable. Not only did silver emerge from that rounding bottom in
an uptrend, it has also now burst through the top of that uptrend.
Now look at Chart 3, Silver,
January 1979 – June 2004, arithmetic scale. Again, notice the
long rounding formation beneath $8.25 resistance. For about 20 years
that $8.25 resistance turned silver back time and again. You can see
that in April, 2004, when silver first touched that line, it fell back back, correct and them challenged $8.25 again. When it
finally broke through $8.25, it ran away to the next resistance at $15.00.
Comparing silver’s
performance to stocks’ over the last 6-1/2 years offers us another
witness that silver is in a primary uptrend. Chart 4 shows Stocks
versus Silver, 8/25/99 – 5/3/06. The little flat pancakes
(and drooping slag-sickle) on the left show how various stock indices have
performed. The towering stacks on the right depict the performance of
silver & gold. While stock indices have dropped by as much as a
third, or done nothing at all, gold has risen 150.3% and silver has risen
169.2% (2.69 times where it began).
Lest I be accused of bias, let’s see how
silver and gold have performed against some other investments. Look at
Chart 5, Investment performance as of 30 April 2006. Only the
HUI, the unhedged gold stock index, has
outperformed silver in the last one, three, or five years. What about the
Dow, the S&P 500, and the US Dollar Index? Silver has left them in
the dust.
Chart 5,
Investment performance as of 30 April 2006
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% change
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Annualized
% change
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4/30/06
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Month
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YTD
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1 year
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3 years
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5 year
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10 year
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Dow
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11,367.14
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2.3%
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6.1%
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11.5%
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10.3%
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1.2%
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7.4%
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S&P 500
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1,310.61
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1.2%
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5.0%
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13.3%
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12.7%
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1.0%
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7.2%
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HUI
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378.79
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12.6%
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36.8%
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112.8%
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44.8%
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46.5%
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n/a
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XAU
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158.11
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11.6%
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23.5%
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89.3%
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34.3%
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23.5%
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1.0%
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US $ Index
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86.11
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-4.0%
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-5.6%
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2.0%
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-4.0%
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-5.8%
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-0.2%
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CRB
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379.53
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4.9%
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9.1%
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25.0%
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17.7%
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12.1%
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4.0%
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Gold
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$
644.00
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10.7%
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25.5%
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47.8%
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24.1%
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19.6%
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5.1%
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Palladium
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$
364.00
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9.6%
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42.8%
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83.8%
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32.6%
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-12.0%
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10.7%
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Platinum
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$1,145.00
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6.4%
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18.7%
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32.1%
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23.8%
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14.0%
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11.1%
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Silver
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$
13.38
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16.1%
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50.2%
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93.2%
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42.3%
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25.1%
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9.7%
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HISTORICAL OUTPERFORMANCE
If I had a chart 45 feet long on which
every foot represented 100 years of human history, the gold/silver ratio
would remain under 16:1 for all but the last 15 inches. In
fact, for the first 40
feet (until about 1500) the ratio oscillated under 12:1,
and spent most of its time between 8:1 and 12:1. Only after the
discovery of huge silver deposits in the Americas does the ratio begin to
climb above 12:1. I can only speculate about the reasons for the
ratio’s relative stability. Probably it arises from the relative
ratio of silver to gold in the earth’s crust, which geologists estimate
at 17.5:1.[i]
BIMETALLISM
& ALL THAT HOGWASH
Reading the standard economics and history texts you
would think that bimetallism led the 19th century into a riot of monetary
confusion, but that is hogwash. It wasn’t bimetallism, but state
action that caused the problem. Rather than following the market ratio
(as the US monetary system was designed to do) England and France set their
official mint ratios at different levels, so whichever metal was temporarily
cheaper in one country would drain out to the other country. This
chronic misevaluation tended to drive out of circulation the more
under-valued metal – generally silver. After about 1815 the ratio
began to fall (silver gained value against gold). Though small by
today’s standard, that drop sped up in the 1830s and 1840s as huge new
gold deposits were discovered in Carolina, Australia, and California.
The price of silver in gold dollars ($1.00 in gold = 0.048375 troy ounce)
rose from $1.29 in 1848 to 1.35 by 1857[i] (the ratio fell because it took
fewer ounces of silver to buy an ounce of gold). Silver’s rising
price forced the US to make its fractional coin (half dimes, dimes, quarters,
halves) subsidiary. Since silver bought more gold as bullion
than at its face value, speculators were melting the small silver coin.
Dollar coins had already disappeared. Congress reduced the silver
content of the fractional coin by 6.5% (from 0.7734 ounce per
dollar to 0.7234
ounce) just to keep small coin from disappearing.
So the cause of the bimetallic problems was not a
rising supply of silver from the Comstock Lode (the red herring usually
trotted out), but a rising supply of new gold. More disruptive than
that, however, was the policy of setting official mint ratios politically rather
than following market determined prices. After the US demonetized
silver in 1873, followed shortly by Germany and other nations, the ratio of
course rose. The loss of monetary demand for silver sharply reduced
overall demand, and therefore price, although silver didn’t fall as
quickly as you might expect.
Chart 6, Gold/silver
ratio 1792 – 2005, yearly averages, shows how the ratio behaved
during two centuries. What interests us most as we try to devise an
investment strategy is the pattern. The ratio trades in a range,
with tops at 100:1 separated by 50 years, and bottoms at 16:1 or lower in
1919, 1968, and 1980.
From this chart we can draw tentative conclusions
about the ratio’s behaviour. (I say “tentative”
because nothing is sure in markets until after it has happened.)
In bull markets, silver always outperforms gold; in bear markets,
silver always underperforms gold.[i]
A closer look
at price action refines our perspective. Look at Chart 7, Gold/Silver
Ratio daily, 6/1963 – 5/2006. In the five year bear phase of
the market from 1968 to 1973, the ratio rose from 13.76 to 46.96.
However, in the following seven year bull phase the ratio returned to 14.91
at the very top of the metals bull market in January, 1980. In the
following bear market, for eleven years the ratio rose to 99.81 in 1991 as money
drained out of silver and gold. From there it turned down and has
steadily fallen.
For a closer, more recent view, look at Chart 8, Gold/Silver
Ratio daily, 1/1/1991 – 5/6/2006. Today’s chart shows a
falling wedge pattern, that usually resolves in a breakout to the upside.
That implies that after the recent fall to 43.6, the ratio should spend a
long time rising to the upper side of the trading channel. (In
fact, that’s what it has indeed done, through July 2006.)
Our swapping
strategy takes advantage of the ratio’s moves from the top to the
bottom of this trading channel. Near the channel’s top, where
silver is cheap in terms of gold, we swap gold into silver. Near the
channel’s bottom, where gold is cheap in terms of silver, we swap
silver into gold.
From Chart 7
you can tell that the upper line of the trading channel has moved
outward. When the ratio first began declining from its 1991 peak, it
declined at a steeper rate. Because that top channel line lay lower
down on a steeper angle, we began making trades out of gold into silver at
60:1, and continued all the way up to 82. That proved to be the
uppermost extent of the move, and enabled us to draw a new upper channel line
for the downtrend. Now glance at Chart 9, Gold/Silver Ratio daily, 1
June ’00 – 3 May ’06. The ratio plunged fairly
quickly to 51, and I made a big mistake. Not realising how many hedge
funds had put on the long silver/short gold ratio trade, I was waiting for
the logical target, 50:1, to swap silver for gold.
However, all the big players bailed out at 51.
the ratio turned around on a dime and never looked back, so we missed our
silver-to-gold trade in 2004.
A long sideways correction followed, from April 2004
through August 2005, ending at 64.93:1. I was targeting 43 or 40 to 1
for the bottom of the next move, but my friend Bob Ladone
(see his article, “Ode to Beauty,” in the January 2006 Moneychanger)
made such a persuasive argument for 46:1 that I moved my target there.
As it turned out, we had only four (4) days to make the trade at 46:1 or
better, and wouldn’t have gotten to do them if we had waited for 43.
SILVER SET TO OUTPERFORM,
AND ALREADY OUTPERFORMING
Silver will always show greater volatility –
the violence and size of moves and their sudden reversals -- because it is so
much smaller market than gold.
In the teeth of the common wisdom that there’s
plenty of silver available, there is far less silver aboveground and ready to
come to market than there is gold. According to Gold Fields Mineral
Services in Dec. 2005, Central Banks claim 29,000 tonnes gold reserves, about
935 million ounces (“moz”). Call
that “ready to come to market” stocks.
My guess is that that at most there is
about 900 moz aboveground, ready-to-come-to-market
silver stocks, or about same as supply of gold. (Others whose opinions I
respect estimate as little as 300 moz.)
Valued at the 3 May 2006 market (665.90 & 13.704), the gold was worth
about $622.3 billion, the silver only about $12.3 billion, or about 2% of the
gold. Therefore only a small amount of money flowing into silver has a
huge
impact. A billion dollars flowing into gold
would raise the price of an ounce only about 90 cents or about 1/10 of one
percent. The same billion bucks flowing into silver would raise the
price 90 cents an ounce, but that amounts to 6.5% of the current price.
NOT FUNDAMENTAL BUT MONETARY DEMAND
As I pointed out before, it is not fundamental but
monetary demand that drives silver and gold prices. Keep that point
in mind and never forget it. It is monetary (or investment) demand
that drives both silver and gold, not fundamental.
Fundamental demand only needs to be neutral or
favourable to silver, and not negative, because it only changes slowly.
In other words, we don’t want to see any big silver surpluses
or hoards overhanging the market, as Indian silver and the US silver hoard
did in the 1960s and 1970s. Neither of those is a problem any longer.
Monetary demand really drives silver’s price
crazy because it hits at margin as incremental demand, & changes very
quickly -- so suddenly that supply has no time to adjust, so only
the price can adjust – upwards. (It takes 5 – 10 years to
bring a new silver mine into production.)
At present we
have all those conditions. Total Silver Demand (chart 10) runs
around 800 million ounces yearly, and is not dropping. Moreover, since
1989 silver has been in structural deficit (“more silver consumed than
produced”), as chart 11, The Silver Sinkhole, plainly
shows. Over those 16 years the yearly shortfall has averaged 12% of
consumption. By now that shortfall has consumed some 1.5 Billion ounces,
far and away enough to
consume the surplus brought to market during the
1980s. We know that monetary demand has already hit, because of
silver’s performance in the last couple of years. Refer back to
Chart 5, Investment performance.
JOINING THE PARTY –
OUR INVESTMENT STRATEGY
If silver is going to rise faster than gold, then we
want to own more silver than gold. If the Gold/Silver ratio (the price
of gold in terms of silver) rises and falls within an overarching downward
trend, we can also use that to our advantage.
Our goal is (1) to own and hold physical (not
paper) silver & gold throughout the bull market and (2) to increase the
number of ounces we hold while we wait for prices to rise. Our tool is arbitrage.
Arbitrage is “the simultaneous purchase and
selling of an asset in order to profit from a differential in the
price.” Usually it involves buying in one market and selling in
another to take advantage of price discrepancies. (Actually, we are
doing exactly what the arbitrageurs did in the 19th century when
they shipped silver from England to France to take advantage of its higher
gold price there.) We either trade from gold to silver, or from silver
to gold. I admit, arbitrage is, strictly speaking, simultaneous, but we
trade from gold to silver and silver to gold over time based on the
primary trend. (Remember trading from top to bottom in the ratio
trading channel?)
- When silver is relatively cheap to gold (ratio
is relatively high), we buy silver with gold
- When gold is relatively cheap to silver
(relatively low), we buy gold with silver.
Chart 12,
REALISED SWAPS FROM GOLD TO SILVER
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Trade No. 1
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GOLD
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Ratio
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SILVER
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Began 2003
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(78.0312)
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oz
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63
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(4,915.97)
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oz
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Ended 2006
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100.0000
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oz
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49.16
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4,916.00
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oz
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21.9688
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oz. gain =
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-28%
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Trade No. 2
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GOLD
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Ratio
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SILVER
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Began 2003
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(20.0000)
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oz
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73.28
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(1,465.60)
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oz
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Ended 2006
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27.6316
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oz
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52.47
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1,449.83
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oz
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7.6316
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oz. gain =
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-38%
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Trade No. 3
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GOLD
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Ratio
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SILVER
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Began 2/03
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(561.0000)
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oz
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70.52
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39,562.88
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oz
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Began 4/04
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(500.0000)
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oz
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63.9
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(31,949.78)
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oz
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Ended 2006
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1,559.2354
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oz
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46.77
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72,930.00
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oz
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498.2354
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oz. gain =
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-47%
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On Chart 8 Gold/Silver Ratio daily, 1/1/1991
– 7/18/2006 look at the trading channel. We trade gold
for silver toward the top of channel, and silver for gold at the bottom.
THE TEST
Does it work? As always, the proof is in the
pudding. In Chart 12, Realised Swaps from Gold to Silver, you
will see some actual swaps that we executed. They include all expenses except
taxes. What taxes you pay depends on too many variables for me to
predict. In fact, if you sold gold or silver you had bought at higher
prices, you would actually have a capital loss on your trade-in. If you
pay taxes, they will range from 10% to 28% of the gain. However,
don’t take my word for it, but see your tax expert.
In these three actual trades we averaged gains from
28% to 47%. The first half of these trades (swapped from gold into
silver) was done two to three years ago, so some patience is needed with this
strategy. Observe that the strategy works for large investors or small.
Our goal is
to convert a sterile investment – silver or gold – that throws
off no dividend or interest into a paying investment. While we are
waiting for the price to rise, we make that sterile investment fertile by
swapping back and forth from silver to gold to increase the total number of
ounces we hold at the bull market’s end.
GOLD/SILVER RATIO SWAPPING STRATEGY
Here’s my strategy in a nutshell:
·
We always own & hold precious metals, for the duration of
bull market.
·
We swap gold for silver or silver for gold when the price is
right, to increase the total number of ounces we hold.
·
Worst risk: we swap too soon, and end up holding
gold instead of silver when the ratio reaches its low at 16:1.
·
Another refinement: As silver market offers
opportunity, we swap from one form of silver to another, increasing the
number of ounces we hold. (From 25 years experience in the silver and
gold market, I know one thing is true: “Premium always
disappears.” Therefore whenever any form of silver or gold
develops a large premium over its metal content, I’m going to swap that
off for something cheaper to increase the number of ounces I hold.)
·
Goal: To end the bull market holding mostly
silver (70% or more), because it will rise faster.
·
Goal: To double the number of ounces we hold
over life of the bull market.
·
So far, so good.
Franklin Sanders
www.the-moneychanger.com
18 July a.d.
2006
[i] I find that 1968 bottom
very curious. The US government probably precipitated that
bottom. In a silver bull market the government was trying to escape its
obligation to redeem silver certificates for physical silver. In 1967
Congress decreed that silver certificate holders had only one year to cash in
their certificates for silver. That loosed a feverish speculation in
silver certificates and silver. The ratio bottomed at 13.76 on 11 June
1968, just ten days before silver certificate redeemability
expired.
[i] James U. Blanchard III
& Franklin Sanders, Silver Bonanza: How to Profit from the
Coming Bull Market. Jefferson,
Louisiana: Jefferson Financial, Inc., 1993.
[i] American Geological
Institute Data Sheets for Geology in the Field, Laboratory, and Office, Third
Edition, Data Sheet 57.1, “Abundance of Elements,” on average the
naturally occurring ratio is 17.5:1.
Reprinted with permission from The Moneychanger. Franklin Sanders
lives on a farm in Middle Tennessee by choice, deals in physical gold &
silver, and has been writing and publishing The Moneychanger for nearly 26
years. In 1993 he wrote Silver Bonanza for Jim Blanchard. Last year he
published "Why Silver Will Outperform Gold 400% and & The
Professional Trading Secrets That Will Make the Most of Your Silver &
Gold Investments," still available at www.the-moneychanger.com/order/publications.phtml.
You can sign up for Mr. Sanders' free daily
e-mail commentary on gold & silver at www.the-moneychanger.com, and
download your free portfolio calculator to keep up with your gold and silver
investments.
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