Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Should You Invest in Silver Now?

Silver’s gotten whacked over the past several weeks. For silver bulls, the question now is – how much lower can you expect silver to go, if the bear market resumes?

Guest author Jeff Clark looks at the historical price action of silver, the “other” precious metal, to see where appropriate buying points may be had for those who believe that eventual inflation is inevitable…

***

How Low Will Silver Go?

-Jeff Clark, Casey’s Gold & Resource Report

We released our 2010 Silver Buying Guide last week and the silver price promptly cratered. So does this change our view of gold’s shiny cousin? Hardly.

While industrial uses comprise about half (53%, according to GFMS) of silver’s demand, making it susceptible to bigger falls than gold in a weak economy, it is equally clear silver also responds well to inflation, as well as serious financial “dislocations” (to put it nicely).There are many examples of this, perhaps the best being the late 1970s. The economy in the middle of that decade was going nowhere, so some investors dumped their silver holdings because demand would supposedly be weak. A big mistake, as we now know, because silver’s greatest advance occurred at a time industrial demand was, at best, flat. Instead, silver rose due to monetary concerns and rampant inflation, giving investors 500%+ returns in the latter part of that decade, with an easy chance for even higher gains.

So if you’re buying silver to protect yourself against inflation and out-of-control government spending, then – as Doug Casey is fond of saying – sit tight and be right.

Still, it might be useful to contemplate how far silver could fall, particularly if you don’t own enough and are looking to add to your holdings.

The following chart examines all the major corrections in the price of silver in the current bull market (2001 to present). I only included corrections greater than 10%, many of which were big and sudden, much like we’re experiencing now.You can easily see how volatile silver has been. Yet amidst all that volatility, the price has risen 334% from its 11-21-01 low (as of May 21).

Based on this data, we can make some projections. Our recent high in silver was $19.64. Therefore…

  • A correction matching the smallest decline of 10.3% would equal a silver price of $17.61. Silver closed at $17.64 on May 21, a correction of 10.1%.
  • The average correction in the chart is 19.7%. You’ll notice this is almost exactly what we experienced earlier this year. An average correction from the May 20 high would give us a silver price of $15.77.
  • The two nasty corrections of 33.7% and 34.9%, when averaged together, would give us a price of $12.90.
  • The 53.9% cliff drop would take us as low as $9.05.

These projections cast a wide net, to be sure, but there are still some conclusions we can draw:

1) The current correction in silver, as sharp as it is, is not out of the ordinary. Nothing is happening to the silver price right now that hasn’t occurred before.

Diagnosis? Normal.

2) If you agree with our analysis that says inflation is inevitable and that fiat currencies will sooner or later be taken off life support, then scary drops become great buying opportunities. Imagine if you had bought during that waterfall decline in 2008; you could’ve paid less than $9 for an ounce of silver. That would make the current correction less worrisome. By extension, buying during today’s big downdrafts will give you peace of mind tomorrow when we see another correction at higher levels.

Treatment regimen? Buy the big corrections.

3) Adjusted for inflation, silver’s peak in 1980 would exceed $100 today (and that’s based on distorted government CPI numbers).

Prognosis? Excellent.

Since we don’t know where the next bottom is, one effective way to handle purchases is to buy in tranches. You could place limit orders at a couple different levels.

But we might save the Big Purchase for a true fire-sale price, something greater than the average sell-off. There won’t be a big flashing light that says “Buy Now!” when the bottom forms, but the bigger the drop, the easier it will become to ease into the market.

No comments: