SILVER 0.30% $15.25 silver futures

http://www.theaureport.com/pub/na/7404Will Silver Decouple from...

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    http://www.theaureport.com/pub/na/7404
    Will Silver Decouple from Gold?
    Source: Julian Phillips, Gold Forecaster 09/17/2010

    Has Silver Been Coupled to Gold?
    For the last few years silver has moved in relative tandem with the gold price up to now. We called it the 'long shadow of gold' because it would rise further and fall further than gold, but they did move together. Occasionally, silver did pause as gold rose but the 'shunt' effect (when a train pulls forward with a line of carriages in tow and each jumps forward as their links tighten) kicked in and it jerked forward to catch up with gold's moves. Many investors keep their eyes focused on the gold:silver ratio (one ounce of gold buys X number of ounces of silver) and trade it regularly. Right now, that ratio is at 1:60. However, by coupling we also wonder whether they'll continue to act and react together on a daily basis, apart from price differentials.

    Moving Together
    When it comes to market prices moving up and down and sideways together, we are not looking at the commodity aspects of the metals, but the market perception that these two are precious metals that were money for the bulk of man's history. Savings were expressed almost entirely in these metals and once deemed as the only valid money around.

    Money or Precious Metals?
    This is where the relationship between the two metals is anchored. Despite any industrial or jewelry (solely for decoration) uses that do not relate to wealth retention, gold is considered money in many parts of the world. The developed West does not consider it so, even in the face of over 30,000 tons of gold held in central banks worldwide and many central banks now buying it. But even developed world central banks are keeping a firm hold on what they do have. So we must ask: Are these simply precious metals, or do they serve some as real money? This is critical to the movements of gold and silver prices. If the overall perception of the two is of future 'money' (as a measure of value), then they will reflect the levels of uncertainty over fiat money. In support of this come comments by Alan Greenspan spoken as recently as this week. At a Council on Foreign Relations meeting Mr. Greenspan commented that he'd "thought a lot about gold prices over the years and decided the supply and demand explanations treating gold like other commodities 'simply don't pan out.' Greenspan concluded that gold is simply different. He said: "If all currencies are moving up or down together, the question isrelative to what? Gold is the canary in the coal mine. It signals problems with respect to currency markets. Central banks should pay attention to it." We believe central banks are doing just that.

    As we enter what could be a volatile period for international currencies as Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner begins a more aggressive tact against China's yuan exchange rate (the dollar is slipping again) and Japan intervenes to weaken the yen, confidence in fiat currencies' ability to truly measure value is waning. That's why the two are moving together and will do so in the future.

    We qualify that, to some extent, as some fundamental factors affecting the two precious metals are affecting the silver price in particular (see below).

    Another change is emerging in the silver market in the developing world. In both India and China amongst smaller investors, silver is far more affordable as the gold price roars out of their range. So, the concept of silver being the "poor man's gold" is rising fast and showing itself in the rapidly rising demand for silver in those nations. This represents a small but significant diversion of demand away from gold to silver as prices rise for the two metals.

    Silver Prices Affected by Fundamentals
    Gold has seen a halt to central bank selling in the first year of the third Central Bank Gold Agreement. Only now has silver seen an end to 'official' selling by India, China and, last of all, Russia. This has allowed a good source of supply to disappear and forced the buyers of that silver to go to the open market to get its silver. In addition, the decline in photography uses is being overtaken in the new uses for silver in solar panels, 'rfids,' medicine and other electronic uses. All this silver is being consumed and will be until its monetary role in the long-term prices it out of the consuming markets and, like gold, it is simply stored not consumed. Most of you will not believe that is a possibility. The net result of these two changes in silver's fundamentals will be for silver's price to rise much faster than the gold price in percentage terms.
 
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