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Perhaps the biggest wild card in the 2005-2006 timeframe for silver prices
is the introduction of the silver ETF and its success (or lack thereof). Since
early last year, silver bulls such as ourselves have been taken with the notion
of a silver ETF and its impact on the silver market. Silver is such a small,
tight, relatively illiquid market that a successful innovation in the way
for individuals and mutual funds to own silver (without the hassles of
storage costs and steep premiums to spot) could have a pronounced effect on
the silver price.
The gold ETF was launched late last year after a very long and frustrating
battle with the SEC to get the ETF registered and approved for trading. The
belief last year was that the powers that be in the silver industry would follow
the blueprint the World Gold Council laid out in its ETF and that the silver
ETF would have much smoother and quicker sailing. So far the jury is out on
smoother, but quicker does not appear to be the case as a proposed silver ETF
has not even been filed with the SEC. Our sources have long indicated that
an oil ETF would be the next commodity ETF to get done, then silver, copper,
and a few others would likely follow. So it was with great interest that these
two headlines passed our desks recently:
05-18-05 07:18 PM EST
NEW YORK -(Dow Jones)- Standard Asset Management, a company created by Ameristock
Funds, filed a registration statement with the Securities and Exchange
Commission to create an exchange-traded fund that tracks the price of oil.
06-08-05 07:25 AM EST
LONDON -(Dow Jones)- Barclays Global Investors, a unit of U.K.-based Barclays
PLC (BARC.LN), will file an application for the first silver exchange traded
fund with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission before the end of
the year, a spokeswoman told Dow Jones Newswires Wednesday.
So some progress is being made. An oil ETF was actually filed with the SEC.
And it appears that Barclays is getting close to filing a registration statement
with the SEC for a silver ETF. A silver ETF trading in 2005 now appears to
be a long shot with 2006 being the more likely timeframe. However, the ETF
is closer to becoming a reality and its impact on silver is likely to be far
more pronounced than gold or oil. How big an impact is anyone's guess.
The two U.S. gold ETFs (tickers: GLD & IAU) have combined to gather a
little around 6 million ounces or about $2.6 billion in assets since November. These
ETFs have seen their assets steadily increase month after month for the first
6 months despite a generally lower gold price. If silver could muster annually
just 1/10th of what gold did in only 6 months, we are talking about $260 million
in silver ETF demand, which at a $7.20 silver price implies 36 million ounces
in incremental demand for silver. We will argue the effect will likely be much
more over time, but 36 million ounces seems a conservative starting point.
Below, we have hazarded a guess based on annual gold demand versus gold U.S.
ETFs size and what their relationship in gold might mean in silver. We then
applied that to silver and tried to again come up with a conservative estimate
of the ounces a silver ETF may suck up. The shaded cells are the estimates
derived from our analysis. One can see how a 46.4 million ounce estimate is
finally arrived at:
Likewise, we are emboldened on the silver ETF's chances for success in light
of the huge investment demand increase (34 million ounces) silver exhibited
in 2004 and the reports of continued demand in 2005. In fact, early 2005 results
for gold show increased demand in 2005, which should bode well for silver.
To quote from the World Gold Council Q1 report (silver demand statistics are
only available annually):
"The first quarter of 2005 saw exceptionally strong demand for gold,
particularly from the jewelry sector, from bar and coin purchases and
from investment in gold backed exchange traded funds (ETFs). End-user
consumption (which includes all identifiable categories of demand) was
26% higher in tonnage terms and 32% higher in dollar terms, compared
to the same period in 2004."
The stage seems set for a successful silver ETF as investment demand for the
metal is increasing thanks to the Dollar and other fiat currencies' weaknesses,
along with tightening inventories.
more follows for subscribers . . .
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