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| Silver Zoom is Ignored
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By The Texas Hedge
Todd Stein & Steven McIntyre
March 3, 2006
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texashedge.com
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So after a quarter of a century, silver finally
returned to double-digits. While we aren’t fans of
following day-to-day moves, the recent zoom past the $10/oz
mark is noteworthy. It seems that the precious metals community
is anticipating the launch of the silver ETF – so
perhaps this is what is causing the grey dog to bark. Maybe
that’s the case, but we certainly don’t think
that abnormal amounts bullion are being gobbled up by Barclays
in anticipation of the ETF’s launch. Nor do we think
that the public is suddenly hoarding silver.
What is interesting to us is that the mainstream
media and average investor have no idea what is going on.
CNBC has a ticker in the morning that includes some commodity
prices, but silver remains absent. Web sites such as MSN
and Yahoo spit out headlines about Google, retail sales,
and oil – it is only on rare occasion that gold is
mentioned and that is when the price breaks $400/oz or $500/oz.
Even the commodities sections of major financial web sites
seem to ignore silver. For example, we can find nothing
about the recent strike at Penoles, the second largest mining
company in Mexico. Compare this to a hypothetical strike
at Exxon, which would make top headlines.
A little more than twenty six years ago, when
the silver market was being cornered, the general public
started to wake up. At the very top, there were news stories
about average people taking their silverware in to be melted.
While we are not anticipating a repeat of early 1980, it
is logical to think that the bull market will not end until
we see the public paying attention to what is going on.
The combination of miner unrest in Mexico,
increasingly radical leaders being elected in Latin America,
and the silver ETF is adding more fuel to the already bullish
fire of silver supply/demand. As with any asset that has
had a huge run in a short period of time, a meaningful correction
could occur at any moment to shake out the weak hands and
momentum players, but we think that continued annual supply
deficits of silver will not go unnoticed by the mainstream
investing public for long. Oh, and we haven’t even
mentioned the ticking time bomb that is the U.S. Dollar
and how its looming decline will almost certainly add a
great deal of investment demand to gold and silver at a
time when silver supply and inventories are very limited.
March 3, 2006
Todd Stein & Steven McIntyre
Texas Hedge Report
.*****
Todd Stein & Steven McIntyre are internationally
known analysts and editors of The Texas Hedge Report, a
market newsletter that highlights under and overvalued securities
in the equity, bond, currency, and commodity markets
For more information, go to http://www.texashedge.com
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