When thinking about an investment, the best managers look  for returns that beat what they perceive to be average.  In the long run, wealth is a relative  measure—today, even the poorest people are wealthier than the richest people  five hundred years ago, though we’d still say that today’s poor are  poor. 
Investments work along the same lines, with the simple  concept being that an investment must have performance that is preferable to  your current financial trajectory, and it must have a return that beats holding  money in cash, as well as the negative returns incited by  inflation. 
Whether or not you are a current silver holder or not, ask  yourself one simple question: what price would it take for you to sell your  metals or buy government debt?  At what rate  would it be favorable for you to invest your money in stocks, bonds or any other  investment? 
Now, take that number, which is likely quite high, and  compare it to past performance of all the markets out there.  You can compare it to stocks, bonds, and  commodities, and see simply which asset type has produced returns that you would  see favorable.  It would be a safe bet to see  that the returns and performance that you want out of your investment portfolio  haven’t been found in stocks nor bonds for the past twenty years.  
Silver Bubble is Not 
For the individual investor, an exercise that looks into  what he or she wants in an investment isn’t a daily happening, though it is for  the institutional investor.  The markets  measure just like wealth—you can do well, as long as the other guy doesn’t do as  well as you do. 
So when the hysteria of a bubble emerges, investors should  ask bubble promoters where they should go from silver.  Should they buy stocks, which are priced as many as  twenty years into the future?  Should silver  investors pile into fixed-income investments and take home 4-5 percent per  year? 
It is here that we reach the end of such an argument.  Not only are the opportunities present in stocks  and bonds weak, but they’re also offering returns that aren’t consistent with  their risk profiles.  So why would you hold  silver, if you wouldn’t own cash flowing stocks, bonds, or an assortment of  mutual funds?  Because silver is the new  cash. 
Investors who have amassed massive positions in the metals  markets are telling the market that the options aren’t exciting.  If you’ve only a small selection of underperforming  bonds, underperforming and expensive stocks, or negative-return generating cash,  is it really much surprise that you want an alternative?  Traditional investments have a best possible  outcome of returns equal to a few percent per year, after inflation, and cash  has a best possible outcome of negative returns each year. 
The bubble isn’t in silver ownership, but in low rates and  indebted economic institutions.  When investors  hold commodities, they’re holding the new cash, and they are insulated from risk  to a degree that everyone should appreciate.   Silver is “in a bubble” because the remaining opportunities are stuck in  a rut.  At what point would silver investors  swap their holdings for paper assets?  You  might have to bring back Volcker to make that happen. 
Source: http://news.silverseek.com
 
No comments:
Post a Comment