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Gold and silver went through a severe correction this summer just like the correction in 1975. Then gold prices dipped by almost 50 percent from peak to trough.

Since its March all-time high of $1,030 an ounce, gold has completed a perfect 38.3 per cent Fibonacci retracement, bouncing back to current price levels. Silver also followed the Fibonacci sequence, albeit with a deeper 50 percent fall from March peak to the trough.

It is important therefore to note that price corrections are behind us in precious metals. These were fairly brutal commodity price corrections. But the rebound has been quick in the case of gold and can only be around the corner for silver – the two seldom move out of synch for long.

Tipping point

Now we have to look at the supply and demand position to determine whether this could in fact be a tipping point. The downside after a big correction like we have just seen is clearly small or entirely gone.

Gold first: last week investors queued in the streets of London to buy gold. We have a similar rush in the souks of Dubai. Gold coins are selling at the highest premiums to spot gold price in 30 years, and stocks are running out.

Gold has risen sharply in price this week despite a very sharp rally in the US dollar, lower oil prices and collapsing stock markets. Usually the dollar and gold do not move in the same direction, so this is highly significant. Gold also usually falls with oil.

Bullion premium

In silver the premium paid for bullion bars is up to 50 percent above the spot price as dealers are running low and demand remains very strong. Why are silver premiums higher than gold: simply because silver stocks are tighter.

This is the classic case of tugging on a piece of elastic fixed to a brick. The pull of the retail price is suddenly going to increase the silver spot price. It just has to as bullion dealers replace their stocks.

We now also have an official enquiry into the shorting of the silver market by two US banks over the summer that crashed the price. No matter that the banks will probably be exonerated. They have removed their short positions – so there is nothing there to prevent silver prices surging ahead.

Supply shrinking

Meanwhile on the supply side things could hardly be better for price rises in precious metals. Central banks are withdrawing planned gold sales while output is falling at the major producers.

Silver stocks have always been tight as unlike gold the metal is consumed by industrial processes; but silver is also a precious metal which tracks gold as ‘the poor man’s’ alternative. Silver production is increasing but only at a snail’s pace.

Will silver prices again outperform gold by a factor of two as they have in the 2000s so far? It is not guaranteed but looks to be a fair assumption. And once stock markets have ceased to fall silver producers look like an excellent buy, as will the junior gold exploration companies.

However, if this is not a tipping point for gold and silver prices then it can only be a matter of weeks or a couple of months until we reach one. Mostly likely this is it.

From the 1975 correction up to 1980, gold prices grew eight-fold and silver 20-fold - and history has a habit of repeating itself. It never is different this time…

Indeed, the highly inflationary bailouts of the banks that we are seeing today are a mirror image of the rescues that occurred after the 1974 stock market crash and the tripling of oil prices in 1973. Oil prices tripled in 12 months to $147 earlier this year. We are watching an old movie here with money supply boosts from the central banks that can have only one effect: higher inflation.

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This article has 14 comments:

  •  
    Stay with gold.When the market is down(safe haven).When the market recovers,oil will rise.Rinse and repeat.
    2008 Oct 07 08:47 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Excellent analysis of current situation re:gold and silver. This is a huge flight to safety in highly (hyper?) inflationary times. I expect the miners and producers to follow the price of gold up soon.
    2008 Oct 07 08:52 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Question - how does the fact the we must deleverage all the assets inflated by the 30:1 investment bank leverage impact this? Seems to me we have massive asset deleveraging that requires(bad word, it doesn't require anything, just we've chosen to replace) monetary replacement. How much of that newly created money will be used to replace bad debt and not be usable in the system for purchases? This has been going for about a year as best I remember, shouldn't it equilibrate with out a huge spike or dip in gold if done properly?

    After this, we need to real economy people into the banking system. This is absurd.
    2008 Oct 07 09:27 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    One other factor to consider is that the Chinese and Japanese are both sitting on huge piles of dollars in their reserves. If/when they ever decide to start spending these dollars to trim their reserves they will either drive the dollar down, gold/silver up, or both.

    One thing is for certain, foreign governments will be less likely to sop up the excess dollars in their reserves going forward. The drop in the dollar's value going forward is plain to see and they will eventually have to do something about the losses in their reserves.
    2008 Oct 07 11:00 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Increasing the money supply does create inflation regardless of whether the money is used for spending or to pay down debt. I went to a fairly large coin dealer on Friday and they were completely out of silver and had very little gold.
    2008 Oct 07 11:16 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Very good article Peter,

    I think the manipulators have a few more tricks up their sleeves, and I think things are really going to be ugly when they loose control.

    I am also concerned that holders of GLD and SLV might get ETF'd.
    2008 Oct 07 11:16 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    ETFs are now facing a huge problem,& I would not want to be holding fake Gold or Silver, too much has yet to hit the fan & it will soon,over & over! If you have time,go to GATA.org's web site,there is a Wealth of Data & Real Time UP DATES of VITAL INFO,Plus for those with Mine Stocks,JSmineset.com has been a Level Headed Thinker & Shares it !! Manuipulation will rear its Ugly Head,so be Carefull, I would not Rule out a BANK Holiday SOON?!?
    2008 Oct 08 11:50 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    What does "ETF'd" mean? Why might SLV be in peril if the price of silver rises? It publishes increased sales of bullion. What does Mr. McHugh see in store for SLV from the manipulators?
    2008 Oct 08 12:17 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    To: hghodges:

    My guess is the F'd in ETF'd means F*****d! Because if one is stupid enough (in this climate) to put FAITH in meaningless paper substituting it for REAL gold and/or silver, the only word I know that fits is the one above!

    The manipulators have gotten "tons" of their shorts covered (regarding silver) so the ONE SURE THING that will send those bastards over the cliff is if you and I and the rest of John Q Public BUYING physical silver. They can't deal with not having silver available, and its drying up fast. Keep buying. Very soon the price spike (UPWARD) will make you dizzy!

    [Ed: Comment edited to remove abuse.]
    2008 Oct 08 04:52 PM | Link | Reply
  •  

    Sounds like the golden parachute fleece of the treasury by the Iluiminati ilk is a silver lining that can pad one's jacket of security as the cold winter of depression marches mercilessly towards us. I'm going to need deep pockets for all this silver.

    ----------------------...

    Funding Available, No Banks, No Loans, No Bailouts, No Bull
    2008 Oct 08 05:23 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    slv up 44 cents today and going
    2008 Oct 09 07:57 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Comments by user 30121 to Mr. hghodges ...could you expand your comments. I'm in SVL and went that route because of the difficulty in holding physical silver. I'm somewhat new to ETF's and am trying to learn quickly.
    I would appreciate your comments and if you could, speak to your experience.
    Thank you
    2008 Oct 10 02:51 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    To "Sidelines": I have quite a bit of physical silver. I find it easy to store. The 100s make nice bookcase supports in the basement. But I got clever and thought to trade the exchange-traded fund SLV a bit. Doesn't look too smart at the moment but I am lucky in that I can make margin calls. (Incidentally, it's Ms., not Mr.) All I know about silver comes from 4 years of reading Ted Butler (Investment Rarities). When he was satisfied by Barclays' list of bullion bars and numbers that they actually had what they claimed to have, that was good enough for me. Of course he may be wrong--but I find his scholarship convincing. I'd be glad to hear arguments to the contrary.
    2008 Oct 10 07:40 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    I am not fooled by the manipulation of the market by banks and big investors trying to make it look like the dollar is strong by pushing down silver (by shorting it). I am not looking to get rich off of buying silver, I am just waiting for the eventual hyper-inflation so that I can have enough money to buy airline tickets to flee to an agrarian country and buy a farm.
    2008 Nov 26 05:16 PM | Link | Reply