THE EXCELLENCE OF SILVER

By Theodore Butler

Late March 2007

(This essay was written by silver analyst Theodore Butler, an independent consultant. Investment Rarities does not necessarily endorse these views, which may or may not prove to be correct.)

I write today about investments in general. But I want to make it clear that I am not intending to offer personal financial advice on how anyone should invest. You can’t offer anyone specific financial advice unless you are familiar with their personal financial situation. That may sound contradictory, since I have been an outspoken advocate for the merits of silver, but I don’t see it as contradictory. I observe the silver market closely, offer my analysis and opinion and back up what I write with factual data. After that, the individual must decide.

It’s no secret that we live in an increasingly complicated world. In financial matters, data and opinion change at warp speed. This has led to short-term thinking and investing with many newsletters and services dispensing advice to encourage this trend. Lately, I wake up to an imaginary million-dollar short-term trading contest on financial TV.

The thought of making enormous short-term profits is quite appealing. So is the thought of becoming a movie celebrity. The odds of consistent success in short-term trading are comparable to becoming a celebrity. I’m not saying it can’t be done, just that the majority can’t do it. This is coming from someone with a commodity futures trading background. Long-term investing offers the best chance for success. That leads us to the best choices for long-term investing. What’s best to buy and hold for a long while.

There are only a few basic asset classes from which to choose. Those are debt (bonds and other interest bearing instruments), equity (stocks and mutual funds), real estate and all others. The other category includes gold, silver, commodities, natural resources and things like art and collectibles. This article is intended for those investors who choose to decide for themselves what to invest in and wish to stay in control of their investments, rather than cede the control to someone else. This requires a certain amount of investigation, comparison, and reflection. The best way to do that is through listening to what others say or write and acting on what makes the most common sense.

Let’s look at the big asset classes and how they have done over the past 5 years, and are likely to do in the future. How an asset performed in the past is not necessarily a guarantee of how it will perform in the future. Examining the reasons for past performance is, however, a legitimate methodology for looking ahead. It’s hard to know where you are going if you don’t know where you’ve been.

I find myself confused by the stock market’s performance as time goes on. The S&P is up from the lows of 4 years ago (by almost 80%), but still lower than the highs of 7 years ago. So performance is mixed. More importantly, the prospective outlook is mixed. Analysts appear to be all over the spectrum on future economic and investment trends.

The debt market, both on the long and short end of the yield curve is about where interest rates have been over the past 10 years. There have been no great fortunes made in bonds, but interest payments have been consistent. For income derived from mortgage obligations, however, the recent news does not appear to be good. I am not anti-bonds, but I don’t see how the average investor will get wealthy holding them. In real estate, the performance was good, until the past year or two. Now, storm clouds have rolled in, courtesy of easy credit and excessive borrowing. When an asset looks like a bubble that has burst, its prospects won’t look good for a while. It’s hard to come up with anything positive to say about real estate as an investment because it’s currently over-owned and over-leveraged.

That leaves the "all other" class, which includes natural resources, industrial commodities and precious metals, including gold and silver. Not only has this asset class had the best performance of all assets over the past five years, the reasons behind that performance strongly suggest a continuation of this out-performance. Insatiable demand from China, and other fast growing economies, has driven the large price increases in natural resources. This demand is rooted in the quest to improve living standards. While there are no guarantees, a slowdown in the US economy might not derail that quest. Among major asset classes, natural resources still seem to have momentum and appear likely to outperform debt, equity and real estate.

An Easy Choice

If you conclude, as I have, that natural resources are the preferred asset class for the long-term, where is the best play likely to be? For me, silver is the head and shoulders favorite. It is the easy choice. Here’s why.

Price. While silver has outperformed equity, debt, real estate and gold over the past 5 years, it has under performed other natural resources. Copper, nickel, zinc and uranium went up more. As a value-investor, the price lag of silver to other industrial items is an inducement to buy. The items that outperformed silver went up for the same reason – stronger than anticipated demand. Silver shares this industrial demand, so the fact that it has lagged the others on a price basis creates the opportunity to buy a bargain. At some point in the future, silver’s price will greatly outperform everything else. However, that is not the case today, and it’s a big advantage for buying silver at this time.

History. Almost 65 years of consumption that exceeds production has decimated world silver inventories. These inventories took thousands of years to accumulate. For the most part, they are gone forever. The current price of silver does not reflect this to any significant degree. No other commodity has ever experienced this phenomenon to this extent.

The closest possible example is uranium, where decommissioned nuclear warheads coming to market allowed uranium consumption to exceed production for 20 years. The distortion in the law of supply and demand is now clearly being reflected in the price of uranium, which is up more than 12 times from its low point, and may be headed much higher. Since the situation in silver inventories is more extreme, it is reasonable to assume a minimum 12-fold increase from the low in silver, bringing a price of $50+.

Another major difference is that uranium is a "new" commodity, in that it has only seen increased demand since the beginning of the nuclear age in the middle of the last century. Therefore, it is reasonable to assume that new resources will be found and developed. Silver is an "old" commodity, in that it has been in demand since the dawn of civilization, thousands of years ago. Therefore it is reasonable to assume that giant new silver discoveries will be fewer and less rich. It is unlikely we will discover a new Comstock Lode.

Duality. Silver stands alone as the only practical investment vehicle that is both an industrial commodity and a precious metal. This places silver on a very unique pedestal. Few potential silver buyers recognize just how powerful this will be to the price. No other industrial commodity can experience broad-based retail and institutional investment buying. Silver already has, and will continue to see, such buying. Investors aren’t stupid. Not only will more and more of them come to learn the real silver story, the infrastructure and investment vehicles already exist to accommodate new investors. The trick is to position yourself before the masses arrive.

In the eyes of the world, only gold compares to silver as an investment. Maybe one in a thousand investors recognizes that silver is more rare than gold above ground. This is not a secret that can be hidden forever. When it becomes more obvious (through silver’s outperforming price action), expect fireworks as it collectively dawns on the world how little silver is available. Remember, based upon how much the above ground gold is worth ($2.5 trillion) to how much all the above ground silver is worth ($13 billion), gold investors are likely to recognize the rarity of silver before other investors. Gold investors are pretty sharp and will move quicker than others to jump on silver. If just one-tenth of one percent of the value of above ground gold moved into silver, that would come to $2.5 billion dollars, or about 200 million ounces of silver at $13/oz. That’s much more than total COMEX inventories.

Gold buyers anticipate the dollar will decline and see this as a good reason to buy precious metals, because as the supply of dollars is inflated, the value of metals is also inflated. The supply of paper currencies has been inflated much faster than the long-term 2% annual increase in the above ground stock of gold. This is the essence of the case for gold as an inflation hedge. But that’s even a better reason to choose silver over gold, as silver’s above ground stock has actually decreased by more than 90% over the past 65 years.

I’ve always called silver the good news metal because it doesn’t need bad news to go up in price. Others look to precious metals as insurance, which I understand. But even if you anticipate bad news ahead and desire an investment that can thrive in bad times, the fact that there is such a scarcity of silver, in total dollar terms, should make silver a better insurance policy.

The Bombshell. If there is one thing that separates silver from any other asset class, or any other item in any asset class, it is the presence of an unprecedented concentrated short position in COMEX silver futures. It is the existence of this concentrated short position that will, at some point, launch the silver price to the heavens. This short position has grown so large, and is held by so few entities, that it no longer matters how it will be resolved. It must be resolved and, whether that resolution involves default or buying by short covering, it will have the same bullish impact on price.

You don’t have to look any further than the concentrated COMEX short position as to why silver has not outperformed every other commodity. Just as it explains price under performance (if a triple can be classified as underperformance), it is telling you why there must be overperformance in the future. At some point, the price of silver must accelerate upward to price levels that are truly shocking.

The long-term investor should be on the prowl for the asset that will be the best place to channel money. Success requires investigating all the facts as they develop and weighing the changing merits of all asset classes. The long-term investor seeks to capture the best possible return at the smallest possible risk. Five years ago, I felt silver was at the top of the list, and that has proven to be the case. Based upon all that is likely to occur in the next five years, silver is still at the top of the list. It’s the single best asset you can own today.

RETIREMENT BLUES

By James R. Cook

Have you ever seen film clips of a rocket ship leaving earth? At first you see nothing but flat surface, then you begin to see the earth’s curvature. Soon the earth becomes a large ball and begins to shrink. It gradually gets smaller. Before long, the earth is the size of a dime. That’s what happens to your money after you sell out or retire. After about fifteen years of retirement your savings bonds and annuities, that were once so comforting, have shrunk in purchasing power like the diminishing earth.

Let’s face it, the government’s inflation figures aren’t trustworthy. Inflation across the board is probably around 10% year over year. Furthermore, runaway government spending promises more inflating as government creates new money to pay for its wayward social schemes. Over time the dollar has lost 98% of its value and, anecdotally, the pace of decline seems to be quickening. The earth becomes the size of a pea and then a BB.

As a person of retirement age I notice that people that don’t have any more income (no matter how much money they have) tend to cut back and curtail their lifestyle. They worry to some degree about money. The longer you live, the greater the likelihood that government sponsored inflation will eat away all of your savings.

I believe we have a partial solution. Put 10% of your net worth into physical silver. Take possession or store it with HSBC bank. Keep it in a home safe or large bank safe deposit boxes. Hold it for the long term. You want something that will neutralize the evils of inflation. Silver should offset inflation and hopefully do much more than that. If analyst Theodore Butler is right, it could also offset the loss of purchasing power of the other 90% of your money. Under any circumstances, we see it as the best available cure for government monetary policies that are little different than the evils of the Dark Ages, when silver coins were clipped or diluted with base metals. One thing is for sure, if you just take it on the chin and watch your savings shrink, you can wind up with nothing. The earth will eventually get so small you can’t see it. When that happens, it’s either rely on the children or the government. God forbid!

A TED BUTLER QUOTE

The following quote came from Mr. Butler’s e-mail to a client of ours.

"Of all the industrial or precious metals, or resources in general, the one that has the absolute best chance to explode to unprecedented price levels is silver. That’s due to the unique and highly combustible mix of impending shortage and the immense concentrated paper short position. The world has never witnessed an actual physical shortage of a precious metal with such a large and documented short position. Bottom-line, the one commodity with the potential to shock and awe and make people rich is silver."

Ted Butler

OTHER QUOTES

"The Roman Empire rose and fell through the debasement of gold money. By secretly pilfering gold from coins, emperors funded foreign adventures and expanded their power. In 15 B.C., Emperor Augustus established the ‘Aureus’ at 126 grains of gold. In 60 A.D., Nero devalued it to 110 grains. By 200 A.D., it was down to 60 grains. And by 268 A.D., the coin no longer contained any gold at all. Each reduction in the gold content was used to increase the number of circulated coins. Gradually, the Roman Empire crumbled."

John Pugsley

"We are in danger of being overwhelmed with irredeemable paper, mere paper, representing not gold nor silver; no sir, representing nothing but broken promises, bad faith, bankrupt corporations, cheated creditors, and a ruined people."

Daniel Webster, speech in U.S. Senate in 1833

"Paper money has had the effect in your state that it will ever have, to ruin commerce, oppress the honest and open the door to every species of fraud and injustice."

George Washington

"The natural progress of things is for liberty to yield and government to gain ground."

Thomas Jefferson

"Limited government, individual freedom and personal responsibility are far more radical concepts today than they were in 1776."

James Cook

"The U.S. Comptroller of the Currency, Mr. Walker, estimates that total U.S. debts outstanding, funded as well as unfunded, have reached an astronomical $US 71 TRILLION."

William Buckler

BUTLER’S BRILLIANCE

By James R. Cook

Contrary to what most people think, the recent increase in commodity warehouse stocks of a few million ounces of silver is bullish. The old way of thinking claimed that a rise in warehouse stocks was bearish and a reduction of these stocks was bullish. Not according to Ted Butler.

He suggests the recent rise in inventories is extremely bullish. When large delivery demands come in at the end of a contract month, it usually indicates that buyers are interested in getting silver quickly. Due to exchange rules and regulations, all deliveries must be made by a certain date near the end of the month. If you buy in the beginning of the month, you may have to wait until the end of the month to get delivery. If you buy at the end of the month, the wait is much shorter.

Every day recently someone was purchasing contracts for delivery. If silver already on deposit is not available for delivery, then silver must be brought in to the COMEX warehouses to meet this delivery demand. That means that the 120 million or so ounces in the warehouses may not be available for delivery. It’s already owned by someone and they’re not selling. New silver must be brought in to accommodate the new buyers.

In addition, most observers only look at the net change in COMEX warehouse stocks. Butler points out that gross changes are important as well. For instance, recently there has been a lot of silver leaving the warehouses as new silver comes in. This increase in physical turnover movement is indicative of tightening in the physical market. A good portion of this silver going out may be headed to London for deposit in the ETF. Butler claims that the ETF is "shy" several million ounces right now.

Clearly these are highly bullish circum-stances. Leave it to Ted Butler to see clearly what’s going on in silver. How much proof does anybody need that Ted Butler is someone who should be listened to and his advice followed.

NAILING IT

Once in awhile someone pens a paragraph that eloquently describes the current predicament. In a recent newsletter, Richard Russell wrote this. "I watch the debt statistics because in this country debt is a growth industry. Rising debt is eating this country up alive. The US's defense against rising debt is inflation. Debt is denominated in dollars. But the problem with debt is that it sucks up wealth. And it tends to compound. But if inflation accelerates faster than the build-up of debt, then debt can be "handled." The problem is that as debt and inflation both accelerate, the purchasing power of the dollar declines.

As the debt of the US grows ever-larger. the inflation process also speeds up. This concept is not lost on real money or gold. Last year the dollar price of gold increased by 28%. During the same year the dollar price of silver increased 69%. Real money, which was in a bear market slump from 1980 to 1999, is now back in a bull market."

SILVER PRODUCTS

I agree with Ted Butler. I can’t think of anything better for us to sell than silver. Actually, I’m thankful that we have this product. We couldn’t make the same strong argument for anything else. I think it’s a win for us and a win for our customers.

We currentlyly recommend bags of circulated Kennedy Half Dollars and Franklin Half Dollars. These old half dollars were coin-of-the-realm in the U.S. up until 1964. Each bag contains 2,000 coins and 715 ounces of silver.

These half dollars have been heavily melted and these are the survivors. You should own these great coins that are rich in silver. Each bag weighs 55 pounds and is the size of a bowling ball. We ship a bag in two separate plastic buckets weighing 28 pounds each. If and when you sell it back to us, you can use the same plastic container to ship it back.

If you want to store your silver, 1,000-ounce silver bars are a good way to go. These large 60-pound bars are stored at HSBC, one of the world’s largest banking groups. They stand behind the security of the bars. You get a storage agreement in your name and the serial number of your bar. Nobody can match this storage arrangement. (Other storage programs are in the dealer’s name and don’t give you serial numbers.) Call us and buy some 1,000-ounce bars. 1-800-328-1860 They’re a great way to own silver with the safest possible storage program. We also have 100-ounce bars available for storage or for shipping to you.

Sincerely,

 

James R. Cook

President

Web Site Design by Media Relations Inc

All Rights Reserved © 2002 Investment Rarities, Inc.
For Web Site Questions Contact the Web Master
Disclaimer

Sign up for
a free year
of The
James Cook
Market
Update