
Chinese Silver Currency
Recently it was announced on a Chinese news service that silver bullion is
now being offered to the Chinese public. Please note this is a very small operation
and at this point none of us knows if this will really catch on with the Chinese
investing public.
There are some subtleties going on in China that not too many people write
about. China actually has a fairly long history with silver and I might suggest
that readers check out the archive section at Silver-Investor.com and read
what Charles Savoie has written on this subject. I know many of my colleagues
are not as bullish on silver as I am, yet going back many years I recall reading
an article in Barron's by John Doody.
I'm going to guess that article appeared about 15 years ago. Barron's interviewed
Johnmostly about the gold market, but during the interview he got bullish on
silver. He made this argument about the industrialization of China before it
was really taking place, how vital silver is to an industrial society -- same
argument I make -- that China had over a billion people, and this was going
to be very bullish for the silver market. I thought, you know, "Touché,
John, right on."
That's still the main argument about China and silver. Everything that uses
electricity or electronics requires silver, almost. Think about it: your cell
phone, your laptop, your CD player, plasma screen, refrigerator, washing machine
. . . everything you can think of that uses electrical current or is an electronic
item, like an iPod, uses silver to some level.
So even though it's a miniscule amount, if you've got a billion people seeking
these type of gizmos, gadgets, and just raw power or something as basic as
a washing machine, that puts an upward pressure on the silver price from an
industrial perspective. But I think more importantly is that China is catching
on to silver as an investment.
When I was in China, I met with Mining Bureau in Beijing, and also the banking
sector responsible for mining finance, the bank, was concerned about a couple
of things.
One, they were very concerned about recycling; in other words, they are very
conservative. I think anybody who's thinking green would be astounded to know
how China is so un-wasteful in some areas, though not all I grant you.
The Chinese are really conservative, but let's face the facts -- when you
have very little you waste very little. They don't want to waste anything,
especially silver. The mining finance people expressed concern that there's
lots of mom-and-pop recycling going on and they wanted to know my idea on how
to consolidate this recycling.
China was really the last one to go off the silver standard. And it was not
a good thing for them, relative to what was going on with the currency markets
on a worldwide basis at the time. So there is a history in China with silver
as money, and all those people who knew that are not dead yet. So there is
some propensity to use silver as an investment, and here on the Silver-Investor
Web site, I posted a news item about silver bullion investment opening up in
China.
How much silver investment demand there will be and how it will catch on,
nobody knows. I expect it to catch on. I believe that, as we get nearer to
the ultimate top in the precious metals markets, silver will far out-perform
gold. My belief, and this certainly can't be proven, is that people have almost
a financial survival instinct, just like a basic survival instinct, and when
things are really going south in a hurry, people will seek something, anything,
that they perceive will preserve their wealth or protect them.
And both metals have done that throughout history. Now, if gold is going north
of 1,000 or 2,000, pick a number; the idea is that you might not have that
much to preserve, but whatever you've got you are highly motivated to preserve,
and you're going to go to either the next best thing or the only thing that
you can -- and that of course is the silver market.
Now we saw a taste of that in 1980. Basically what was happening at the panic
buying phase of the market where "everybody," or about 1 percent of the population,
was trying to ditch the U.S. dollar. They were saying, "Get me anything but
dollars . . . the dollar is history." And they were seeking silver and gold,
and a lot of silver was purchased at the top because silver was more affordable
to a lot of these people.
I see that taking place this time around, except this time it's not going
to be 1 percent of the United States' population, it's going to be roughly
1 percent of the world's population. And on top of that, you've got to remember
that at the time silver hit $50.00 in 1980, and there's roughly 1.6 billion
ounces more fine silver available above ground than there is today.
So, we have a much smaller silver supply that's available for investment or
industrial use or either, and we also have a much larger base of people willing
to get into the silver market than there was before. I think that the $50.00
level is going to be breached in real terms. If we take the $50.00 price that
silver achieved in 1980 and adjust for inflation, that's roughly $130.00 an
ounce in today's dollars!
I have been on record as saying I see silver going over $100.00 an ounce in
U.S. terms. Now I want to be very clear here: I'm very practical. For something
to get to $100.00 it means it must get past $20.00 again and then it needs
to get to $30.00 and $40.00 and $50.00 and on and on, so certainly I'm not
trying to give any false hope or false indicators here. But I know these markets
fairly well and when the U.S. dollar goes this time, the panic of 1980 will
look like a warm-up event.
That is, in this euphoric phase of the market where everybody and his brother
and mother and aunt and uncle are looking to get into precious metals, that's
all you're going to see on the mainstream news. You're going to see silver
and/or gold on the cover of TIME Magazine.
What you're going to see is a huge, huge move. But before we get there, we
have to come off the base that we're building -- this long consolidation, this
wide trading range -- and then after that we will get to the phase of the market
psychologically, where there's optimism in the precious metals again.
During this phase you might see that gold goes from, let's say, a $1,000.00
barrier, breaks through that, and moves up nicely over several months to maybe
$1,500.00, $2,000.00, $2,500.00, I don't know the number exactly. But I want
to give you the correct idea.
Gold (silver too) builds this back-and-forth and back-and-forth upward trend
over several months, and then after that's accomplished, you usually get some
type of pullback and consolidation. But in most markets, shortly after that,
the market will go into the euphoric state. This is where, as stated earlier,
everyone wants out of the dollar and into precious metals. This is usually
a very fast moving market with new highs being set day after day, and people
simply cannot believe that the gold and silver prices are what they are!
It is an honor to be.
Sincerely,
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David Morgan
Silver-Investor.com
Mr.
Morgan has followed the silver market daily for over thirty years. Much of
this Web site, www.silver-investor.com,
is devoted to education about the precious metals.
Mr. Morgan has been published in The Herald Tribune, Futures
magazine, The Gold Newsletter, Resource Consultants, Resource World, Investment
Rarities, The Idaho Observer, Barron's, and The Wall Street Journal. Mr. Morgan
does weekly Money, Metals and Mining Review for Kitco. He is hosted monthly
on Financial Sense with Jim Puplava. Mr. Morgan was published in the Global
Investor regarding Ten Rules of Silver Investing, which you can receive for
free. His book Get
the Skinny on Silver Investing is available on Amazon or the link
provided. His private Internet-only newsletter, The Morgan Report, is $129.99
annually. To suscribe to the Morgan Report click here.
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