The Silver Shortage Of 2013
Byron King
Did you hear the U.S. Mint just ran out of silver? In mid-January, the Mint
suspended sale of the 2013 run of its popular U.S. “Eagles.”
The new silver Eagles sold out fast. They went on sale, and buyers bought
everything they could lay hands on. Within days, the shelves at the Mint
were stripped bare. It’s not the first time that this has happened.
The Mint quickly announced that it’s obtaining new supplies of silver. It
will stamp out more Eagle coins. There will be more to buy, or so they say.
And yet… people in the silver markets are squirming — and I’ll tell you more
about that, below.
Right now, silver sells for $31.50 per ounce, give or take. That’s if you
can find somebody to sell you their silver at that price. If you’re a
normal, everyday retail buyer, good luck trying.
Let’s say you want to buy some silver. You call up one of those companies
that advertise on the radio and find out that there’s a markup to $40 or
more for 1-ounce bullion coins. That’s if they have any to sell to the likes
of you. After all, are you a big wheeler-dealer?
If you want the fancy versions of silver coins — “uncirculated” and “proof”
specimens — the price is twice (or more) the posting for basic metal.
The bottom line is that silver is hard to get. You have to plan ahead to
obtain the metal, and even the U.S. Mint gets its numbers wrong, now and
again.
From what I’m seeing — and I’ll explain this, below — one of these days, the
Mint might not simply resume sales so quickly. It won’t have the basic
metal. And I suspect we’re going to see silver prices move much higher.
The Global Silver Shortage
First, let’s review the global scramble for silver. How much of a problem is
it? Well, it’s not just the U.S. Mint that has to worry about supply.
Industrial users are in a bind, as well. I mean big, important companies.
Here’s an example. Last summer, I visited a storage vault dug deep into
solid rock and buried in the hills north of Zurich, Switzerland. It’s a
massive complex, right down the road from a Swiss Army base (and that’s no
accident). You can enter this facility only by prior appointment, because
the Swiss customs department has to do a background check on you. The Swiss
are very thorough, you may have heard.
The vault is constructed with huge steel beams and enclosed by thick,
reinforced concrete walls. Accompanied by an armed guard, you have to walk
down a long, sloping set of corridors and then take an elevator to get to
the deep levels. Heck, it’s like visiting a secure, military command bunker
— of which I’ve seen a few in the course of my life’s journey. Finally,
after a hike, you arrive at the business end of this facility.
This is no fly-by-night, rent-a-locker storage operation just off the
interstate. It’s world-class. It’s a Swiss Fort Knox. In fact, in one zone
of the vault, the Vatican keeps its gold. Seriously. As the vault manager
told me, “Ja, de pope. He puts his faith in God. But he keeps his gold in
Switzerland.”
Don’t laugh too hard. That line about the pope is sort of funny, but there’s
a serious point to be made with all the security — physical, political and
legal — for precious metals. Storing gold in Switzerland? “Uneasy lies the
head that wears a crown,” as Shakespeare wrote in Henry IV, Part II. Today,
even the Vatican is worried, evidently.
In another zone of the same complex, a German automaker — a household name
whose motorcars are revered across the world — stores industrial quantities
of silver, and I mean a LOT of it. Here’s a photo of just a few pallets that
belong to the German company.
These pallets cover the floor of a large room and are loaded down with
innumerable 22-pound bags (10 kilograms, actually) of .999 fine silver.
There’s way more silver than what you see in the photo, but it’s among the
few pictures I was allowed to take.
Why does the German company store dozens of pallets of silver in a secure
vault deep in the mountains of Switzerland? It’s simple, really. So that the
metal is there when the carmaker needs it. As one purchasing manager
explained later in my travels, “For some metals, like silver, there’s no
such thing as ‘just in time’ delivery anymore.”
In other words, this German company buys silver when it’s available. In
fact, the company buys as much as it can acquire. Then it stores and
stockpiles the material in a vault in the mountains of Switzerland, right
next to the pope’s gold.
The moral of the story is that when you need something, you need it. It has
to be there when the time comes. That’s the key to the silver story.
Why Isn’t This “News”?
Are you beginning to suspect that perhaps there’s something going on with
silver? Maybe there’s — not to put too fine a point on it — not enough
silver to go around?
Exactly. Despite many silver mines across the world and the silver developer
wannabes out there raising cash on the stock markets of the world, there’s
just not enough physical metal to meet actual demand.
Oh, yes, people trade “paper silver.” But real silver — the kind you put
into 22-pound bags — is scarce. It’s scarce enough, at least, for one of the
largest German automakers to store its silver in a Swiss vault, next to the
pope’s gold.
Then again, does anything about this silver issue strike you as odd? In
particular, high demand and scarcity of silver isn’t exactly a news item in
the mainstream U.S. media, right? Is the story on ABC News? CBS’ 60
Minutes? MSNBC? Is silver part of any plotlines on NCIS or CSI?
Does Jay Leno crack jokes about silver? Nope.
So, asks the skeptic, is this silver scarcity thing a “real” story? Well,
sez I, in reply, what would it take to get silver into the news?
For the average U.S. media-absorber — including almost all of the political
class who set national spending and monetary policy — the global scarcity of
silver may as well be happening on the far side of the moon. Heck, in the
U.S., with its low-common-denominator Potemkin media, the silver story may
as well not exist.
Since I’m on the topic, I have to wonder what it would take for the U.S.
media to pick up the silver story. I suppose Oprah would have to interview
Lance Armstrong and Lindsay Lohan about the metal. Jennifer Aniston would
have to hit the talk shows, smile demurely and discuss the decline of the
dollar. Brad Pitt would have to sit down with Joan Rivers and explain why
everyone ought to buy precious metals as part of their fashion statement.
Then the silver story might get some traction. People might begin to care
about the monetary and industrial squeeze that’s reflected by the supply and
demand issues behind silver.
Until then? The investment field is wide open. You can set yourself up to
make some money. With silver prices poised to head higher, now’s the time to
find your favorite silver bargains and buy in cheap.
Byron W. King
for The Daily Reckoning Australia
dailyreckoning.com
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