Author: Marc Davis
Posted: Tuesday , 08 Feb 2011
 
Posted: Tuesday , 08 Feb 2011
 VANCOUVER B.C. (WWW.BNWNEWS.CA )  -  
 Silver promises to become the next big buzzword among  investors in 2011 and beyond, according to one of the investment  industry's most prescient and successful experts on precious metals. 
 Eric Sprott is the founder of the Toronto-based investment firm,  Sprott Asset Management LP. His renowned hedge fund, Sprott Hedge Fund  LP, is heavily weighted in precious metals and has generated an  estimated 23% annualized return over the past decade. Other similarly  oriented funds under his stewardship have also been stellar performers  in recent years. 
 He's now so bullish on silver that he launched the $575 million  Sprott Physical Silver Trust in November of last year as he believes  that: "Silver will be the investment of the decade." 
 "I think that silver could easily get to $50 this year," he tells BNWnews.ca. 
 This all bodes especially well for publicly traded companies that are already mining silver, he says. Likewise for ones that are developing  primary silver deposits or gold deposits with plenty of silver as a  byproduct. 
 "If the price of silver continues to go up, silver stocks are going to perform even better," Sprott adds. 
 Meanwhile, Sprott says the big catalyst for surging silver prices in  the coming years will be exponentially increasing investment demand,  which is already beginning to overwhelm existing silver supplies. The  mining industry only produces around 800 tonnes of silver per annum.  This is a relatively inelastic supply, regardless of silver prices, he  adds.   
 As household investors are becoming increasingly jittery about the  debasement of the U.S. dollar and other major currencies, they are  loading up in record numbers on silver bars, coins and  silver-denominated exchange traded funds, Sprott says. 
 However, there's also a quantum shift in investment demand taking  place among big players in the precious metals market, including India  (which is aiming to increase its imports by about 77 million ounces per  annum), and of course China. 
 "China's net imports of silver were 112 million ounces last year. In  2005, they were net exporters of 100 million ounces," he says. 
 "That's a 200 million ounce shift in an 800 million ounce annual  market that seldom ever grows because production hardly ever goes up. So where's it all going to come from? We don't know." 
 In fact, silver promises to outshine gold over the coming years,  Sprott says. "Silver is the poor man's gold. Gold has had a great run  for the past 11 years. But I absolutely believe that silver will  outperform gold this year. Currently, there's more investment dollars  going into silver than into gold." 
 Such a game-changing scenario should recalibrate the gold to silver  pricing ratio in silver's favor, thereby eventually restoring it to its  traditional level of about 16 to 1, he says. "It's the easiest call of  all time."  
 "Silver as a currency always traded in a ratio of around 16 to 1  compared to gold, when it was a currency in the U.S. and the U.K. The  current ratio is 48 to 1. If we go back to a 16 to 1 ratio, the implied  price for silver would be $85.62 (per ounce)." he adds. 
 "On that basis, if gold goes to $1,600, then that would value silver  at $100. And we certainly think that gold is going to $1,600. In fact,  I'm willing to bet that this ratio will overshoot on the downside. It  might even get to 10 to one." 
 The only reason why silver is still trading at a 48 to 1 ratio to  bullion's spot price is that its price is being "manipulated" by big  banks, Sprott says. That's because they don't want precious metals to  become a popular alternative currency to Fiat money (currencies that are not backed by hard assets). 
 "Then there's also a huge short position out there on silver," he adds. 
 But time is on silver's side, he says, as the sovereignty debt crisis deepens in Europe and a continued policy of qquantitative easing in the U.S. continues to undermine the value of the greenback. 
 Source: http://www.mineweb.com
 
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