Analysis of the different advance which has occurred in the silver price vis-à-vis gold in the past few months where the former has  substantially outperformed the latter. 
 Author: Julian Phillips 
 Silver is breaking new records at around $40 and gold is touching new highs of close to $1,460.   Looking back, over the past few years we  have seen gold rise from around $312 to $1,460 a rise of 4.68 times and  silver from around $6 to $40 a rise of 6.67 times.   
 But this does not give a clear picture, so we went back over the last year and what did we see?   Since early 2009, gold has moved from $900  to  $1,460, a respectable 62%.  Over the same period silver has moved  from $10 to nearly $40 a remarkable 400%. Why the difference in relative performance? 
 Both metals have moved as money.   Gold and silver Exchange Traded  Funds have attracted massive investments in the developed world where  trust in the monetary system is far higher than it is in the emerging  world.   But it was the underlying gold and silver that attracted  investors.   Waning confidence in the value of paper currencies gave way to demand for precious metals as a store of value retainers for  investors.   
 Gold and silver have substantial differences as value retainers which help us to identify why the two metals have differed so much in  performance.    
 ·         Gold is and has always been the ‘senior' monetary metal  held by Central Banks as money until 1971 and after that as a valuable  reserve asset in the vaults of central banks. 
 ·         Silver was rejected as money and as a reserve asset by the  mid-fifties, despite it being treated as money throughout the ages  before that. 
 ·         Both gold and silver have been attacked as money through  ‘official' sales from the seventies until last year.   But gold was sold to undermine the reality that it is money.   Silver was sold out from  reserves almost completely by central banks discarding it as money,  completely. 
 ·         Apart from a brief period when Egypt was at its height and  supplies of silver less than those of gold, gold has always been in far  shorter supply than silver and considered far more valuable than silver. 
 ·         Silver in the past few decades has been seen as a  commodity, mined mainly as a by-product of base metal mining, with only  30% mined in a pure silver mine. 
 ·         Most silver is consumed whereas gold is not, which will  continue to be the case until less expensive substitutes are found.   This will only happen at far higher prices still. 
 GOLD AS AN INVESTMENT 
 Gold has always been the precious metal of choice for wealthy  individuals, institutions and central banks.   It has never been  abandoned as such.   Even when "Official" selling was at its peak,  central banks sold only what they thought was sufficient to add  credibility to the paper currency they were pushing to the centre of the system, first to add credibility to the dollar then after 1999 to the  euro.   With those tasks completed, Central Banks are now either holders or buyers of gold.   
 The amount sold in most cases was around 20%, but in the case of the  uninspired then-Chancellor Brown of the U.K.'s case, half of Britain's  reserves were sold.   The largest holders of gold sold none or only  small amounts.   So while it was underpriced and we believe still is,  did not see its price ‘crushed' completely.   
 The path back to investment acceptance is a slow one and a long one  with most of the journey still to come.   We believe that we are on the  brink of major changes in price levels in 2011 and beyond. 
 SILVER AS AN INVESTMENT 
 Silver had not really been an investment metal until 2004 and not a significant one until 2009.   
 It was a commodity metal in so short a supply that the Hunt brothers  of Texas felt they could corner the market.   In 1979, they took the  silver price from its high of $8 an ounce [it had doubled since it stood at $4 an ounce in the mid- 1970s' already] to $50 an ounce by the early 1980's.  It then fell all the way back to $5 an ounce thereafter as the Hunt Brothers found they were unable to sell the silver until prices  had fallen back to those levels where they stayed until October 2003.    Until 2009, it was relegated to the sidelines as an investment metal.  
 It started to regain popularity as an investment metal because it  began to be considered as "poor man's gold" as the gold price rose out  of reach of the poorer investment classes.   
 For instance, in India until its middle classes began to grow  substantially, 70% of all gold bought was bought by the agricultural  sector, whose income was directly related to the quality of the monsoon  rains.   When profits were good, they found their way into property and  into gold,   As the price rose, the quantity of gold available to such  people fell. Then  $1,500 bought five ounces of gold, but with gold at  $1,460, it only buys just over 1 ounce of gold. 
 In India, precious metals are used in commercial transactions so the  divisibility of silver relative to gold was far greater and more  flexible.   It also remained affordable in larger quantities.   After  all, now one ounce of gold buys 36.5 ounces of silver.   So, silver  remains affordable far lower down the economic ladder than gold does.    It therefore can attract a far wider market than gold does currently at  retail levels.   Bearing in mind that precious metals are attracting a  huge and growing market in the emerging parts of the world, the demand,  as a wealth protector, at the retail end of the market is expanding  rapidly. 
 CATCH-UP 
 It would therefore be wrong to still categorize silver as a monetary  metal.   Its day will come, but not until its price is much higher and  not until paper currencies have lost considerably more credibility than  at present.   
 The most difficult part of silver's rise as a wealth protector has  been from October 2004 to October 2008, from when its price moved from  $5 an ounce to a peak of over $20 an ounce then to fall back to than  less $10 an ounce before taking off on its current path.  The fall  coincided with the onset of the ‘credit-crunch. 
 All the while,  demand from the photographic sector has waned.   More importantly, the uses of silver have morphed from discretionary demand  to a need.   Even in a downturn, the demand for silver will remain  strong as its uses are considered vital now. 
 So as a non-monetary, more volatile precious metal, its future then  was far cloudier than now.   The transition from those days to ‘poor  man's gold was its re-birth as an investment metal.   While we believe  it has now returned as such to stay, it still has a lot of catching up  to do.   By catching up we mean that it still has to return to the  concept fully, that it is a lower category investment metal respected  from institutions [eventually by central banks] as well as the retail  end of the market.   
 Gold is already at that point.   This does not mean that the gold  price has reached a ceiling of any kind.   It does mean that the gold  price will rise relative to the value of currencies from now on with its metallic qualities being far in the background.   Silver is still a  long way off from that point. 
 Source: http://www.mineweb.com
 
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