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Resistance
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Title: The 2010 Silver Buying Guide
Source: [None]
URL Source: http://www.zerohedge.com/article/guest-post-2010-silver-buying-guide
Published: Jun 16, 2010
Author: From Jeff Clark
Post Date: 2010-06-16 23:08:21 by DeaconBenjamin
Keywords: None
Views: 105
Comments: 4

Silver has been sizzling and causing lots of buzz in the industry. Investors are excited.

Part of the hubbub is due to its current run. Since its February 8 low, silver has roared ahead 22.4% (through June 21) and has doubled from its November 2008 low.

This excitement has spilled over into greater investment demand – especially so for coins. The U.S. Mint sold more Silver Eagles in the first quarter of this year – just over nine million – than any prior quarter in its history. The Royal Canadian Mint produced 9.7 million silver maple leafs in 2009, also a record.

Take a look at the jump in U.S. Mint coin sales since 2007.

Silver bullion ETFs are growing, too, experiencing a five-fold increase in metal holdings since 2006.

There’s plenty we could talk about with silver, but our goal is to make money. So let’s focus on answering just two questions: Is today’s price expensive or cheap? And, what are the best silver coins, ETFs, and stocks to own?

We have all the answers straight ahead, including lots of actionable info, so let’s jump right in...

Why Should I Buy Silver?

There are several reasons to own silver in addition to gold.

First, it’s cheaper! Known as the poor man’s gold, those with limited budgets will find it easier to purchase. You might hesitate plunking down $1,200 for an ounce of gold, but you can pick up 32 ounces of silver for half that amount.

Second, silver has wide industrial use and this component can help or hinder its price. As its consumption increases across a growing number of industries, this should help place a floor under demand. And because of its unique properties, new uses continue to be discovered.

Third, silver is money and has served this role more than any other material on earth, save gold. Due to its historical role, silver will always have monetary value and offer similar protection as gold to the ongoing global currency devaluations, and will definitely benefit from the inflation hurricane we see as inevitable.

Silver is more practical as a currency used for everyday purchases. When the time comes, you can sell the requisite number of silver coins to cover a specific need, as opposed to being forced to liquidate a high-dollar-value gold holding. Silver is perfect when smaller amounts of cash are required.

Fourth and last, silver could possibly outperform gold before this bull market is over. The market capitalization of silver (and silver stocks) is much smaller, making its price more susceptible to demand spikes than gold.

In the latter part of the 1970s precious metals bull market, gold gained over 700% – but silver soared over 1,400%. If you’ve got a bit of Gordon Gekko in you, we recommend investing a portion of your dollars in silver.

Caution - Hot!

Like all things, silver has its drawbacks, two in particular.

First, the price is volatile. Over the past 12 months, silver has seen gains of 53.8% and 22.9% and drops of 21.9% and 19.6%, all within a period of months or even weeks.

If you’re going to own silver, you must be prepared for big price gyrations. The best way to do that: buy it and forget about it. And...

Make price volatility your friend. Big price swings present the opportunity to snag silver at a big discount. We give some guidance on prices below.

Second is the storage issue. As your pile grows, the advantage to storing gold will become self-evident. At $1,200 gold and $18.50 silver, $10,000 will get you eight gold eagles that will fit nicely in the credit card slots of your wallet; however, it will buy 540 silver eagles, weigh nearly 34 pounds, and fill a small bank safe deposit box.

?How to store physical silver. There are several ways to solve the storage dilemma, even if you plan to buy like the Hunt brothers.

1. Spread your holdings around. Not only is it wise to avoid keeping all your physical silver in one place, diversifying your storage arrangements allows you to buy more. Hide some at home in several locations (no cookie jars, though), and obviously tell only one trusted person. Store some in a bank safe deposit box and use more than one bank as your holdings grow.

2. Buy bars. Silver bars take up less space than a pile of coins of the same weight. We wouldn’t start out with nor have all our holdings in bars, because you want the advantage coins offer. But the larger your holdings, the easier it will be to store some of it in bar form.

3. Use pool accounts and unallocated storage. With a pool or unallocated account, you’re essentially getting free storage no matter how big your stash. That’s hard to beat. You’ll pay fabrication and delivery charges if/when you convert your holdings and take delivery, but in the meantime, you save on storage costs. Great value for the large holder.

4. Private storage. Store your silver with a private vaulting company. The advantage is that it’s outside the banking system; the disadvantage is that it’s usually expensive, though it can be cost effective for large holdings. Do your own due diligence if you go this route because we can’t vouch for any facility, but you could start by checking out delawaredepository.com. Keep in mind that using a vaulting facility beyond a reasonable driving distance will mean added shipping/insurance costs and restrict quick access.

Is Now a Good Time to Buy?

With the gains we’ve seen in silver, would we buy right now?

Let’s first look at the big picture. The following chart shows how far silver is below its inflation-adjusted peak reached in 1980.

Another clue some investors watch is the gold/silver ratio (gold price divided by silver price) shown below

Since our current bull market in precious metals began in 2001, the ratio, while fluctuating wildly, has never gone below 45. And yet look where it went during the precious metals peak in 1980: it bottomed at 17. Even though gold was soaring at the time, silver outran it.

The ratio might show relative strength between gold and silver, but it’s not a good buying indicator. A falling ratio could mean silver is rising faster than gold, like it is currently, or it could mean silver is falling slower. As a result, we’d use the ratio to determine silver’s upside potential but not necessarily when to place an order.

These big-picture signals tell us silver is undervalued and, at the moment, a better bargain than gold. And given the currency crisis we’re convinced is in the cards, we wouldn’t want to be caught without any. If you have a long-term mindset, silver is a buy today.

Would we wait for a better price?

If you do not own any, and plan on holding what you buy until a mania develops, then we wouldn’t wait. The risk of buying silver at current prices is lower than owning none at all.

If you do own some but want to add to your holdings, we’d probably wait for a drop in price, in part because silver could more easily fall when the economy is found to be more fragile than what many believe. And with industrial uses comprising approximately half of silver’s demand, it would be more susceptible to sell-offs than gold if our research is correct about global economies.

Further, summer usually brings pullbacks in prices, and this can be especially true for silver stocks. This is the tendency, though we can’t be sure if this summer will follow past trends. Still, our best guess is to anticipate another leg down this year. If you already own silver, we’d look for a correction to add to your holdings.

In our opinion, owning no silver in this bull market would be a mistake. And your first (and biggest) investment in silver should be in a physical form.

How much physical silver should you have? There’s no right answer and one size will not fit all. But we do recommend holding more gold than silver. Our suggestion for your precious metal holdings is roughly 80% gold and 20% silver.

Like gold, silver comes in different forms. We’d start with the more popular one-ounce coins and then branch out into other types as your holdings grow. (3 images)

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#1. To: DeaconBenjamin (#0)

thanks, Deac. good advice in this article.

christine  posted on  2010-06-16   23:54:49 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: christine, DeaconBenjamin (#1) (Edited)

delawaredepository.com

Their primary storage site (3601 N. Market St) is right in the middle of colored peepul town.

It will also be very convenient for the feds to seize the silver when the time comes to prop up the crumbling central bank.

If you don't take physical possession of your metals and store them where they cannot be found with metal detectors and fireaxes, then you will lose it all when you need it most.

The whole idea is to store wealth that the govt cannot (A) devalue with the stroke of a pen, and (B) seize just as FDR did. Has any court ever ruled that the seizure of gold was unlawful and never to be repeated?

Do Americans believe that the govt is now more honest than in 1933?

And, if you store metals in safety deposit boxes you may as well donate it The Hare Krishnas. The first thing FDR did was drill those boxes and replace gold with paper unmunny. (Wikipedia denies this but it's a goddamned lie. My mother had a friend who owned a necklace made from Mexican gold coins. She found her box drilled open and the necklace gone and yehudibux backed by political hot air in its place. Her bank had not collapsed when she went to claim her necklace.)

Now, if the paper was really worth the same as the gold, why didn't the govt simply keep their paper?

Because European bankers demanded American gold, and they got it. It also removed the people's only means to keep the swindlers in check.

And for the next 41 years We Americans, "the free-est peepul on Earth" were not allowed to own gold. But, we could fight and die for the right of European bankers to own it all, theirs and ours.

HOUNDDAWG  posted on  2010-06-17   0:55:48 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#3. To: HOUNDDAWG (#2)

And, if you store metals in safety deposit boxes you may as well donate it The Hare Krishnas.

yes, i know not to do that, but storing and hiding many pounds of silver is a dilemma.

christine  posted on  2010-06-17   1:23:21 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#4. To: christine (#3)

...storing and hiding many pounds of silver is a dilemma.

Tell me about it.

Remember Ted Binion?

He thought he had it all figured out by hiring a contractor to build a buried vault in Pahrump, NV where he stored a couple of meg worth of silver.

The contractor conspired with Binion's junkie stripper wife to murder him.

So, unless you can hire a contractor who can keep a secret then bury him/her in a secret location.... And, of course there's still the problem of drivers who deliver materials to remote locations and workers becoming suspicious.....

It's not easy but it can be done, and I know of ways. (no details here for obvious reasons)

The main problem is, Like King Midas people want access to their wealth so they can roll in it. They invariably hide it too close to home or on other property they control or own where even mediocre investigators can find it. If the govt's confidence in a starting point is high and enough boodle is at stake they'll employ ground penetrating radar.

Think about that a while.

HOUNDDAWG  posted on  2010-06-17   2:18:31 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


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