Best of the Week
Robert Prechter's - The DEFLATION Survival Guide - FREE 60 page Ebook
Most Popular of the Week
1.The Government Will Default on Its Debts- Gary_North
2.How and Why China Will Flood the Gold Market - Jeff Clark
3.Telegraph UK House Price 55% Crash Forecast Revisited- Nadeem_Walayat
4.Nouriel Roubini's 2009 Stock Market Calls Track Record- Nadeem_Walayat
5.Is Debt-Deflation Economic Depression Just Beginning?- Mike_Shedlock
6.Stocks, Dollar and Gold Bull Markets Inter-market Analysis- Nadeem_Walayat
7.United States Catching the Argentinian Economic Disease of Hyperinflation?- John_Mauldin
Weeks Analysis
What the #@!!*&# am I Doing Out Here in Indonesia?- 7th Nov 09
Risk Trade Collapse Could Trigger Global Economic Depression- 7th Nov 09
Fed Signals “All Systems Go” for More Inflation- 7th Nov 09
Stock Market Top Likely Reached- 7th Nov 09
Financial Transaction Taxes Would Cause Stock Market Crash- 7th Nov 09
It's Time to Rally for Financial Reform - 7th Nov 09
Global Leveraged Speculation Upsurge, Financial Crisis Not Over - 7th Nov 09
Fed Attempts to Export Inflation Will Fail- 7th Nov 09
U.S. Budget Deficit Debt Crisis, Austrian, East European or Glide Option Solution?- 7th Nov 09
U.S. Economy, Investors Say No Worries Mate- 7th Nov 09
What Happened to the Stock Market Crash?- 7th Nov 09
U.S. Dollar Tops, while Precious Metal Stocks Bottom- 6th Nov 09
Financial Markets Profit Opportunity Thresholds Today- 6th Nov 09
Stock Market Investors Open Mind Warning on Highest U.S. Unemployment In 26 Years- 6th Nov 09
Financial Paper Assets Bubble Mania, What Record High Dollar Volume Says- 6th Nov 09
SPX Stock Market and HUI Gold Stocks Pullbacks- 6th Nov 09
Freaking Out over Global Warming- 6th Nov 09
The Path To Runaway U.S. Inflation- 6th Nov 09
Flashback: Bernanke on Unemployment: ‘we don’t think it will get to 10 percent’- 6th Nov 09
Jim Rogers Vs Nouriel Roubini, Can The Commodities Boom Survive? - 6th Nov 09
The Technical Alignment of Gold- 6th Nov 09
Crude Oil Classic Bullish Continuation Pattern- 6th Nov 09
Research In Motion (RIMM) Stock Buyback Chart Analysis- 6th Nov 09
Has Asia Dethroned Detroit as the Auto Sector Leader?- 6th Nov 09
India Buying 200 Tons of Gold, What does it Mean? - 6th Nov 09
The Ultimate Conditions For Economic Recovery- 6th Nov 09
S&P Stock Market Rally To Fail, Lower Lows Ahead- 6th Nov 09
Gold Market Reaching The Breaking Point- 5th Nov 09
Ryan Davies Finds Hot Technology Produces Solar Power for Half the Price- 5th Nov 09
Robert Prechter Current Stock Market Bear and Crash Calls- 5th Nov 09
The Great U.S. Housing Market Foreclosure Robbery Of The 21st Century- 5th Nov 09
Trading and Investing Books to Keep You Sane in an Insane Market- 5th Nov 09
Rethinking the Growing China Stock Market Bubble- 5th Nov 09
Any Way You Slice It, We’re at a Stock Market Top- 5th Nov 09
Five Tips for Trading ETFs- 5th Nov 09
Gold's Last Hurrah? - 5th Nov 09
Who Cares About the U.S. Dollar? - 5th Nov 09
Gold Price Collapse and Market Behaviourism- 5th Nov 09
Is Warren Buffett Implying the Stock Market Will Crash?- 5th Nov 09
When the U.S. Dollar Rallies, the Stock Market Will Crash - 4th Nov 09
The Significance of the IMF India RBI Gold Sales - 4th Nov 09
S&P 500 Stock Market Trends Analysis for November 2009- 4th Nov 09
London Bullion Market Association 2009, The Last Word on Gold- 4th Nov 09
Current Gold Silver Ratio Screams Buy All Things Silver!- 4th Nov 09
China Up / U.S. Down Investment Risk Theme Checkup- 4th Nov 09
Why Gold Has a LONG Way to Go Higher- 4th Nov 09
Can Capitalism Survive? Creative Destruction and the Global Economy - 4th Nov 09
The Best Simple Gold Indicator Around - 4th Nov 09
Gold Price is No Bubble- 4th Nov 09
Dethroning of the U.S. Dollar Will Happen Sooner Than You Think- 4th Nov 09
Stock Market S&P 500 Chart Tells the Truth- 4th Nov 09
Robert Prechter Latest Financial Market Analysis and Forecasts- 4th Nov 09
Central Banksterism- 4th Nov 09
Fed Preventing Financial Institutions From Deleveraging by Propping Up Asset Prices- 4th Nov 09
Peak Silver and Mining by a Falling EROI- 4th Nov 09 - Steve_St_Angelo
Are Biotechnology Stocks Heading for A Downturn?- 4th Nov 09 - Oxbury_Research
Scary Specter of '30s-Style Economic Depression- 4th Nov 09 -Jay Taylor
Telegraph UK House Price 55% Crash Forecast Revisited- 4th Nov 09 - Nadeem_Walayat
Nouriel Roubini's 2009 Stock Market Calls Track Record- 3rd Nov 09
U.S. Dollar at Crossroad, Gold Rally About to End?- 3rd Nov 09
Securitization Bankrupted America, So Who Owns It Now?- 3rd Nov 09
Jeremy Grantham, Stock Markets Being Silly Again- 3rd Nov 09
Make 20 Times Your Money Investing in this Hated Industry- 3rd Nov 09
What is Money and How Does One Measure It?- 3rd Nov 09
Investing in Preferred Shares Dividend Stocks- 3rd Nov 09
Silver set to Soar as it did in the 1970’s- 3rd Nov 09
Has the Stock Market Broken Major Support?- 3rd Nov 09
How to Ride the Commodities Bull Market- 3rd Nov 09
Gold NOT in Bull Market, Nadler Nonsense?- 3rd Nov 09
Life and Debt Video - 3rd Nov 09
State Budgets, How Bad Will it Get?- 3rd Nov 09
States Should Cut Wall Street Out! Own Your Own Bank - 3rd Nov 09
U.S. Third Quarter GDP Too Good to Be True? - 2nd Nov 09
Agri-Food Commodities Continue to Defy Forecasts by Trending Higher- 2nd Nov 09
Are Bank Safe Deposit Boxes Safe? No- 2nd Nov 09
Obama and the U.S. Strategy of Buying Time- 2nd Nov 09
Long Term Equity Valuation, Replacing the P/E Ratio for DR3- 2nd Nov 09
The Political Economy Postponing Providence- 2nd Nov 09
The Ayn Rand Cult- 2nd Nov 09
The Government Will Default on Its Debts- 2nd Nov 09
Economic Recovery, The Great Hoax of 2009-2010- 2nd Nov 09
Is the U.S. Dollar About To Crush Stocks?- 2nd Nov 09
Gold Survived the Test- 2nd Nov 09
Global Economy is Firing on All Cylinders- 2nd Nov 09
Is Debt-Deflation Economic Depression Just Beginning?- 2nd Nov 09
Gold, Silver and Stocks Analysis, Forecast- 2nd Nov 09
Gold Confiscation Risk- 2nd Nov 09
Stocks, Dollar and Gold Bull Markets Inter-market Analysis- 2nd Nov 09
Stocks Bull Market Forecast Update Into Year End - 2nd Nov 09
Geithner Signals Gold Going Much Higher, What to Buy Now- 1st Nov 09
Gold Bull Market Forecast 2009, 2010 Update- 1st Nov 09
U.S. Dollar Bull Market Scenario Update- 1st Nov 09
The Nanny State and the Cost of Unfunded Government Liabilities- 1st Nov 09
Economic Crisis in the Post-industrial Age- 1st Nov 09
Stock Market Down Draft Warning- 1st Nov 09
Stock Markets Sharply Lower on Sustainability Worries of Global Economic Recovery- 1st Nov 09
Halloween and it's Candy Economy- 31st Oct 09
U.S. Dollar Fiat Reserve Currency Root of the Global Financial Crisis- 31st Oct 09
Healthcare Company Profits Sensitivity to Obamacare- 31st Oct 09
UK House Prices Post Annual Gain for First Time in 18 Months- 31st Oct 09
How and Why China Will Flood the Gold Market - 31st Oct 09
Chinese Yuan the Most Undervalued Currency in the World- 31st Oct 09
Financial Markets React Negatively to Reducing Emergency Economic Stimulus- 31st Oct 09
The US Recession Is Not Over, But The Stock Market Party Is- 31st Oct 09
Is the Debt Fuelled Economic Recovery Sustainable?- 31st Oct 09
United States Catching the Argentinian Economic Disease of Hyperinflation?- 31st Oct 09

News Feeds
RSS Feeds

Free Instant Analysis

Free Instant Technical Analysis


Market Oracle FREE Newsletter

Most Popular 2009
1.UK Housing Market Crash and Depression Forecast 2007 to 2012 - Nadeem_Walayat (67,933)
2.Gold Price Forecast 2009 - Nadeem_Walayat (60,634)
3.Depression 2009 The Largest Train Wreck in Economic History - Darryl_R_Schoon (56,968)
4.Nouriel Roubini 2009 U.S. GDP Forecasting 40% Home Mortgage Failures? - Andrew_Butter (47,613)
5.Baby Boomers- Your Generation's Crisis Has Arrived - James Quinn (36.400)
6.The Financial War Against Iceland, Being Defeated by Debt is as Deadly as Outright Military Warfare - Prof Michael Hudson (35,542)
7.Ten Major Threats Facing the U.S. Dollar in 2009 - Eric_deCarbonnel (35,401)
8.Emerging Giants Russia, China, Brazil and India Looming Collapse 2009 - Martin Weiss (34,247)
9.Dow Jones Stock Market Forecast 2009 - Nadeem_Walayat (33678 )
10.Stealth Bull Market Follows Stocks Bear Market Bottom at Dow 6,470 - Nadeem_Walayat (33,082)
11. Economic & Financial Markets Forecast 2009: Collapsing Global Financial System Ponzi Scheme -Ty_Andros (32,413)
12.Hyperinflation Begining in China and Will Destroy the U.S. Dollar - Eric_deCarbonnel (31,215)
13. Stock Market Crash 2009: Fine Tuning DJIA Target To 5,800 - Eric_Chevrette (30,784)
14. .Stock Market to Fall AT LEAST Another 40%! - Martin Weiss (30,336)
15. Economic Forecast 2009: Deflation, Deleveraging, and Recession - John_Mauldin (28,922)
16.How Hedge Funds, Pyromaniacs and Gangsters Caused the Global Financial Crisis - Martin Hutchinson (28,636)
Most Popular 2008
1. The Great Depression 2008 - It can't happen to us....can it?”
2. The Battle for America Has Begun- Strategic Forecasts
3. UK House Prices Plunge Over the Cliff
4. US Banking System Teetering on the Brink of Collapse
5. US Economy Forecast 2008 - First Recession then Recovery
6. How Safe is My FDIC-Insured Bank Account?
7. Rising Risk of a Systemic Financial Meltdown:The 12 Steps to Financial Disaster By Nouriel Roubini
Most Popular 2007
1. US Housing Market Crash to result in the Second Great Depression
2. Operation FALCON - The USA is turning into a Police State
3. UK Housing Market Crash of 2007 - 2008 and Steps to Protect Your Wealth
4. US Housing Bubble Meltdown: "Is it too late to get out"?
5. Global Liquidity Crisis when the Credit Boom comes to an End
Most Popular 2006
1. Last Warning! Three-Pronged Collapse ... Stocks, Bonds and Real Estate
2. UK Interest Rate forecast for 2007 - Bank of England to do battle with inflation
3. UK Interest Rates Forecast to rise much higher due to rising Inflation and high Money Supply Growth
4. Emerging Markets outlook for 2007 - India, China, Russia, Eastern Europe and Brazil

Links

Money Forums
Certz
TradingTheCharts
Housing Market Forecasts
Local Issues


Free Access to Robert Prechters Current Forecasts

Silver in Crisis

Commodities / Gold & Silver Nov 21, 2008 - 11:25 AM

By: Zeal_LLC

Commodities

Diamond Rated - Best Financial Markets Analysis ArticleThe unprecedented financial turmoil plaguing all markets these days is dominating everyone's attention. In a troubled time when the flagship S&P 500 stock index can plunge 30.0% in a single month, it is hard to think about anything else. Thus many smaller markets, like silver, are languishing in relative obscurity.

Silver, an asset which many investors thought would thrive during a financial-market panic, has been scourged mercilessly. After briefly surging above $20 in March, it nonchalantly traded between $16 and $19 or so for the next 5 months. Silver was on top of the world, consolidating high, and all looked well.


But since early August, the global financial panic has radically reshaped the silver landscape almost beyond all recognition. So far in November 2008, silver has averaged just $9.73 on close. The stocks of the world's biggest and best silver miners, companies that held so much promise only 6 months ago, are now down 80%+. It really feels like Armageddon for silver investors, a once unthinkable living nightmare.

I've been a big silver fan since this gold bull started in early 2001. I bought a lot of physical silver back in the early 2000s and first formally recommended silver coins (US 90% bags) to our subscribers as a long-term investment 7 years ago this month when silver traded in the low $4s. Several of my core long-term investments are elite silver producers. So as a long-time silver investor, I am sure feeling the pain too.

Since silver has fallen off a cliff and even its best producers have cratered, silver investors and speculators are feeling tremendous anxiety. Me too, this crisis situation is just unreal. Like so many things in these crazy markets, today's horrific silver environment would've seemed impossible not too many months ago. So this week I decided to take a look at silver in crisis and see what insights we could glean.

To start, we need some perspective. Despite what it may feel like, silver has not been singled out. From early March to late October, silver fell 56.7%. Most of these losses snowballed since mid-July, a span over which this white metal lost an unbelievable 53.0%. This is terrible, no doubt. But realize over this same period crude oil, the king of commodities, plunged 63.3%! Heck, even the geometrically-averaged (hence very slow to move) Continuous Commodity Index is down 43.0% since early July.

Silver's losses are not happening in a vacuum. They have been driven by exogenous forces far beyond the usual small and insular silver market. The financial panic has driven a wholesale deleveraging of all assets, including commodities. It is crucial to keep this in mind. Considering silver technically in isolation, ignoring these unprecedented times, will certainly lead one to draw the wrong conclusions on its troubles.

And silver is unique among commodities even in the best of times. Its small market size, phenomenal historical price spikes, and fanatical following have forged it into one of the most volatile and speculative commodities on the planet. While its secular bull is indeed fundamentally-driven, inflows and outflows of speculative capital have driven violent swings all around this core uptrend. Silver has never been for the faint of heart, it takes no prisoners.

Because of this heavy speculative component driving silver's wild gyrations, speculator sentiment is disproportionately critical to silver's near-term fortunes. If silver speculators are greedy and excited, silver can rocket higher like it did in early 2008. But if silver speculators are fearful and scared, silver can plummet like it did in recent months. Speculators' mood swings drive silver's short-term price swings.

As I've traded silver and silver stocks over the years, it has become clear that one factor dominates silver-speculator sentiment much more than all other factors combined. It is gold's performance . Gold is the king of precious metals, its behavior governs sentiment for the entire PM complex. When gold is strong, silver traders get bold and buy aggressively. But boy, when gold is weak silver traders run for the hills.

In light of this truth, and considering how universal this financial panic's impact has been, we can't consider silver's behavior in isolation from gold's. Gold sets the PM tone, and silver amplifies it. If you are the least bit skeptical of this, I encourage you to study market history to investigate it on your own. I wrote an essay last year, Silver Lagging Gold , that illustrates this strong tendency with 7 charts spanning nearly 4 decades.

Today's silver crisis needs to be pondered in light of gold. It won't and can't make sense in isolation given all the unprecedented financial-market extremes we've witnessed in the last couple months. So in my technical charts this week, I rendered silver (blue) on top of the gold price (red). This first one takes a look at the past year or so in the precious-metals complex.

Silver started this year strong, blasting 50.4% higher from December 2007 to March 2008 to dazzling new multi-decade highs. On a nominal basis, silver hadn't been above $20 since October 1980. And on a real inflation-adjusted basis , silver still hadn't exceeded $20 since March 1984. So seeing silver above $20 this year was very exciting and a big deal in a secular sense. Silver bulls were naturally ecstatic.

But note above that during this early-2008 silver surge gold was also strong. Over this same span of silver's rally, gold powered 24.6% higher. Gold was hitting a series of all-time nominal highs of its own in early March when silver was over $20. When gold is strong, silver speculators get excited and flood into the volatile metal. So it leverages gold's gains, by 2.0x in the case of this particular silver surge.

Unfortunately these maturing PM uplegs were cut short by a surprise from the Federal Reserve. Instead of slashing rates by 100 basis points on March 18th as the markets expected, the Fed only cut by 75bp. It was still a huge cut, it still should have hammered the US dollar. But provocatively the heavily oversold dollar started rallying on the Fed's “restraint”. Gold plunged and dragged silver with it. By early May silver had fallen 22.3%, amplifying gold's own selloff by 1.6x.

Then in much of May and June, silver simply consolidated sideways. Note above that its daily rallies and selloffs mirrored gold's closely, as usual. In early July gold caught a bid and silver followed. But gold's rally wasn't all that large and silver speculators weren't too convinced it was worth chasing. Silver only rallied 18.6% over this span, merely amplifying gold's gains by 1.3x.

All today's silver woes started in mid-July and accelerated into August and September. Between $17 and $18 in late July, still in a typical mild summer-doldrums downtrend , silver looked solid. It wasn't until it broke below $16 in early August that silver technicians started to get scared. And indeed, if you considered silver in isolation it was plummeting down through its key support zones like a mobster wearing cement shoes.

Between mid-July and mid-September, silver plunged a breathtaking 45.5%! It was the worst selloff of this entire silver bull by far, as you'll see below. Speculators had to abandon silver at a frightful rate to drive such an incredible sell-side imbalance. Why did they flee? Because of gold's behavior. Gold was knifing down through support zones too, which quickly turned sentiment deeply negative in the entire PM realm.

Over this same span of silver's brutal selloff, gold was down 19.9%. So silver leveraged gold's decline by 2.3x. This is not far above the 2.0x leverage silver saw to gold in early 2008 during its upleg. So while silver's behavior was terrible in an absolute sense, relative to gold it wasn't beyond the pale. Interestingly this comparison is even a bit skewed thanks to gold bottoming 3 days before silver in September.

If you optimize this mid-July-to-mid-September decline to the exact days of gold's swing instead of silver's, the silver-to-gold leverage ratio looks even more normal. Silver fell 44.5% to gold's 23.8%, a solidly normal 1.9x. While I am certainly not trying to downplay the magnitude of this silver crisis, realize that relative to gold's decline silver's selloff wasn't atypical at all. Silver amplifies gold's behavior, to both the upside and downside .

This begs the question, if gold killed silver speculators' sentiment then what happened to gold? The unprecedented global financial panic, first in bonds and later in stocks, drove one of the fastest and largest US dollar rallies in history. Foreign investors rushed to buy US Treasuries to protect their capital, and they had to buy dollars first. Gold futures traders saw this huge dollar surge and sold gold aggressively. I wrote an entire essay on this particular unique gold/dollar event last month if you want more background.

Out of mid-September's lows, silver surged following gold. On September 17th, gold rocketed 11.1% higher in its biggest single-day rally since January 1980. Silver speculators naturally loved this, bidding silver 15.2% higher that day. By the time this rallying spell ran its course in late September, silver was up 29.3% which leveraged gold's own gains by 1.8x. But although the bond panic into dollars had abated, the stock panic into dollars was just starting. The dollar surged, gold fell, and silver plunged again.

Between late September and late October, the white metal fell another 33.3%. It was amazing, earlier this year I never thought we'd see silver in the $8s again. Nevertheless, despite silver's atrocious absolute levels it only leveraged gold's own decline over this span by 1.8x. No matter how ugly silver looks in isolation, compared to gold (its primary driver) silver's recent selloff was not out of proportion.

Now that you've considered all silver's big swings over the past year, look at this chart again as a whole. All silver has done in going from $14 to $21 to $9 is follow and amplify the underlying moves in gold. Silver's daily and multi-day rallies/selloffs in this chart mirror gold's exceedingly well, as usual fitting like lock and key. Technically, silver is merely gold's little lapdog as it always has been. Without gold strength to ignite silver speculators' greed, silver can never rally for long on its own.

Silver's only problem since August was gold . And a big part of gold's problem was a giant contraction in speculative capital deployed. Due to forced redemptions, margin calls, and sheer fear, traders all over the world pulled capital off the table. Their selling forced virtually all prices lower. Unfortunately gold was not an exception this time around, as it should have been during a full-blown panic. And with gold weak, silver didn't stand a chance.

In recent weeks, angry and shell-shocked silver enthusiasts have been looking for a villain to blame. While conspiracy theorists from various factions will shrilly disagree with me, I don't think there is a silver-specific culprit to tar and feather for the extraordinary chaos of the past few months. Gold got crushed and silver followed and amplified gold as it always ultimately does. End of story.

But one thesis today suggests mainstream stock investors added to this silver plunge by dumping their holdings in the SLV silver ETF . Last week I investigated this claim for gold made by opponents of gold's ETF , and they were groundless. I was curious about SLV so I checked out its holdings. The results will be very surprising to many and suggest stock investors buying SLV are much stronger hands than expected.

While speculators abandoned silver since mid-July, stock traders owning SLV didn't really succumb to this irrational panic. SLV's total holdings, amazingly enough, actually grew and hit new all-time record highs during the silver crisis of recent months! A steep uptrend in SLV's bullion holdings that began during the sharp early-2008 upleg somehow held intact through the brutal late-2008 correction. The silver ETF actually helped retard silver's selloff!

SLV holds silver in trust for its investors. Its mission is to track the silver price. This only happens naturally if SLV supply and demand trends are very similar to underlying silver supply and demand trends. If relatively more SLV is demanded than silver, this ETF must issue shares and use the proceeds to buy physical silver to equalize this demand differential. The opposite is also true, SLV must sell silver bullion and buy back shares if SLV selling pressure exceeds that in silver futures. If these mechanics aren't clear to you, I explained all this last week for GLD. SLV works the same way.

If SLV and silver always had the same supply-demand pressures on a minute-by-minute basis, SLV's holdings would never need to change (outside of the modest annual management fee). SLV's holdings only grow when SLV demand exceeds silver's and only shrink when SLV supply exceeds silver's. Since SLV still grew its holdings even while silver cratered, SLV buying pressure in recent months was greater than the selling pressure driven by silver's collapse. This is incredibly impressive.

SLV has grown fast during silver uplegs, grown slowly during silver consolidations, and has even grown or remained stable during silver selloffs. Stock traders want to be able to get silver-price exposure via their usual stock-trading accounts, so SLV demand has continued to grow despite silver's wild volatility. No matter how you feel about metals ETFs personally, you can't argue that SLV contributed to silver's recent weakness. This ETF actually had to buy physical silver during this futures-based selloff!

Whenever you analyze silver it always comes down to gold in the end. If gold is strong enough for long enough, silver will explode higher as speculators flood in to drive one of its characteristic parabolic spikes. If gold is drifting in a consolidation, silver will dutifully follow in a sideways grind of its own. And if gold sells off, silver speculators will abandon silver in a heartbeat without thinking twice. Gold is the key.

I fully know silver is a religion for some investors who will own nothing else but this metal, its producers, and its explorers. More power to them, silver is definitely very exciting and exceedingly lucrative when it rockets higher. This being said, silver is still at the mercy of gold. This final bull-to-date chart of gold and silver, from my multi-decade study of this relationship, offers some important lessons.

Yes, silver has awesome potential. Yes, its secular bull has already carried it from around $4 to nearly $21 at best. Yes, investors and speculators in silver including me and our subscribers have made fortunes trading it and its producers. All this is true, there are many reasons to love silver going forward. Yet ultimately, silver is slave to gold. It is a hyper-volatile speculation that amplifies gold-driven PM sentiment.

In silver's bull to date, literally all of its gains have come from just 3 fast uplegs. Silver's bull really didn't begin in earnest until early 2003, about 5.5 years ago and about 2 years after gold's own bull began. Out of 22 calendar quarters of silver bull, silver only gained big on balance in about 7 quarters. Note above that all 7 of these big silver quarters, distributed across 3 mighty uplegs, happened when gold prices were strong.

Silver is strong only after gold is rallying high enough for long enough to ignite excitement in precious metals. When gold consolidates and excitement bleeds away, silver is weak. And when gold corrects, silver amplifies gold's downside moves quickly and efficiently. So when gold succumbs to rare extraordinary weakness, any prudent silver investor or speculator will expect silver to suffer even more.

And although the global loss of confidence in all speculations drove silver's biggest correction of this bull by far, I also wanted to point out that extreme silver declines are par for the course from time to time. In early 2004, silver plummeted 32.8% in 24 trading days. In mid-2006, silver plummeted 35.1% in 23 trading days. So its 2008 selloffs of 22.3% in 40 days and 45.5% in 45 days aren't too out of character. Indeed, 40+ day declines for silver are actually a slow pace for a sharp selloff!

Silver always has been very volatile and always will be. Since it is such a small market with so much exciting history and such a fanatical following, speculators will continue to exert an outsized influence on silver. And if the last 4 decades of history continue to hold true, as I suspect they will, the biggest single factor influencing silver sentiment by far will be gold's own price performance. Gold is the key to silver.

So if you believe in gold's long-term fundamentals , that its secular bull will continue to power higher on balance for years to come due to increasing investment demand, shrinking mined supply, and incredible fiat-paper inflation worldwide, then there is nothing to fear in silver. Silver will follow, and amplify, gold in the end. Yes silver is in crisis today, it has been eviscerated technically. But this is an anomaly.

Flight capital desperately buying US dollars to buy US Treasuries to escape a once-in-a-generation global financial panic drove a massive and fast dollar rally. Futures traders saw this and sold gold and other commodities aggressively. Naturally silver fell as gold sentiment imploded. And relative to gold's extreme decline, silver's selloff was not outsized. It was just about right given the magnitude of this anomaly.

At Zeal we've certainly been beaten up by this silver selloff too. Our long-term physical-silver and silver-stock investments were driven to brutally-low levels I never thought we'd see again. Despite this intense pain, this financial panic too will pass like all before it. As soon as confidence returns to the financial markets, probably driven by a major stock-market rally , capital will return to the commodities realm. Gold will benefit greatly and silver will follow it higher as always.

We actually took advantage of this carnage to add a new long-term investment position in an elite silver miner we've long wanted to own. Details are in the current issue of our acclaimed monthly newsletter . If you watched silver soar from $11 in summer 2007 to $21 in March, and wished you could've gotten into silver stocks on the ground floor, today's anomaly is a very rare second chance. Subscribe today and don't miss this incredible opportunity.

The bottom line is silver has indeed been slaughtered. It hurts. But despite unbelievable technical carnage, silver's plunge was not unreasonable given the size of gold's own selloff. As a highly-speculative asset even in the best of times, silver's poor performance during a peculiar panic episode when all speculations were shunned should not be too surprising. Speculators simply abandoned it.

While extreme times can drive extreme price levels, realize that financial panics never persist for long. While silver probably won't hit new bull highs soon after rationality returns, its fundamentally-driven equilibrium price is probably up in the mid-teens at worst. That's much higher than today's levels! As financial-market confidence returns, and gold's bull resumes, silver's crisis of confidence will end too.

By Adam Hamilton, CPA

So how can you profit from this information? We publish an acclaimed monthly newsletter, Zeal Intelligence , that details exactly what we are doing in terms of actual stock and options trading based on all the lessons we have learned in our market research. Please consider joining us each month for tactical trading details and more in our premium Zeal Intelligence service at … www.zealllc.com/subscribe.htm

Questions for Adam? I would be more than happy to address them through my private consulting business. Please visit www.zealllc.com/adam.htm for more information.

Thoughts, comments, or flames? Fire away at zelotes@zealllc.com . Due to my staggering and perpetually increasing e-mail load, I regret that I am not able to respond to comments personally. I will read all messages though and really appreciate your feedback!

Copyright 2000 - 2008 Zeal Research ( www.ZealLLC.com )

Zeal_LLC Archive


Comments


Post Comment (Moderated)




(Note Commenting Issue: If after Submitting you are returned to the Main Index Page then due to site caching your comment has not been accepted. Solution - Click the Browser Back Button to the article page and Press PAGE REFRESH (you should see the message "You are not authorized to carry out this operation") Now re-enter your comment (ignoring the notice) - If all's well then you will remain on the article page after submitting, a moderator will check and authorise the comment. Alternatively EMAIL to comments @ marketoracle.co.uk , quoting the article number.

FREE Deflation Survival GuideFREE Updated 118 Page Independant Investor E-book