The Real Silver
Deficit
David Zurbuchen
Editor of www.silverinscripture.com
Free Silver Stock Investment Newsletter
This
is the 3rd installment of an ongoing series*:
Part
1 – The World’s Cumulative Silver and Gold Production
Part
2 – The Silver Deficit
Part
3 – The
Real Silver Deficit
Part
4 – Amazing
Abrasion!
Part 5 – Photography and the Recycling of Silver.
Part
6 – Silver
as Art: At what Price Might it Come Back to Market?
Part
7 – Wild
Ratios!
Part
8 – Why
the Depressed Prices?
Part
9 – What
Happened in 1980?
Part 10 – The Future of Silver.
*What
started out as a planned 7-part series may grow larger. From now on the schedule is tentative, as I
continue to learn as I go and may feel the need to elaborate upon certain
topics while cutting out others altogether.
For instance, I may combine parts 5 and 6 as shown above, as well as
parts 8 and 9, depending upon length.
Preface
“Silver is rarer than gold. Period. There is less silver in the world, above ground than
there is gold. That is easy to document. Since I have been harping on
this point, no one has been able to refute it.”
“Even
though there are five ounces of gold in the world now for every one ounce of
silver, this 5 to 1 ratio will expand as newly mined gold is added to
above ground supplies… This should get your juices flowing. It should drive you
to buy silver… Silver is more rare than gold, and rarer still is someone who
knows this fact. You should act accordingly.”
-Ted Butler
I
began my last essay, “The Silver Deficit”, quoting Mr. Butler in a
positive light. I sought to prove him
right, and I believe I did concerning the 60+ year structural supply/demand
deficit. But I must now ask, where has
Ted Butler so easily documented his claim that silver is more rare than
gold? I don’t recall ever reading his
proof text*.
*If one does happen to exist, I would appreciate someone sending it to
me.
As
far as I know, Ted Butler is dead wrong in all of his above
pronouncements. It was comments like
those above that mislead me into writing my first ever Gold-Eagle essay
entitled “Silver:
A Rare Opportunity”, an essay which emphasized the
very ‘facts’ that I’m now attempting to refute.
Now,
I realize I’ll probably be making some enemies by calling Ted Butler a liar,
but I believe this is an important issue to come to terms with. If our investment decisions are founded upon
fictions, then we are prone to failure.
That being said, I do truly enjoy Ted’s writings, after all, he was one
of the few writers who really piqued my interest in silver over the years. But nevertheless, I don’t want the average
person to be misled by the above claims he has frequently made.
So
here are my opposing claims:
*We’ll deal more with this ‘price’
in an upcoming essay. For now one would
be advised to read “Hidden Silver About to Surface?”
But a word of caution, at this time I believe Gene Arensberg’s
estimate of how much silver is held in private hoards, if only dealing with
silver in coin and bullion form, is too high.
The Real Silver Deficit
Let us begin by reading a
very telling quote from pg. 1046 of the 1954 Minerals Yearbook:
“According
to the Bureau of the Mint, the world output of silver from 1493 through 1954
was 20,039,463,100 troy ounces,
valued at $17,278,499,800. Of this total
yield, North America produced 62 percent and
Since silver mine production
from 3000BC to-1492AD was equal to about 7.6B
ounces (Part
1), we must add to this the 20.0B ounces mined from 1492-1954 to arrive at
a total of 27.6B ounces of worldwide
silver production from 3000BC to 1954AD.
If only two-thirds of those
27.6B ounces remained, then in 1954 there were roughly 18.4B ounces of silver in existence, mostly in the form of coinage,
government bullion, private bullion, jewelry, and silverware/sterlingware.
From the following
information we can begin to determine the world’s silver supply/demand deficit
for the period 1955-2005:
*Transitional Economies supplied roughly 16% of the mine supply
during this period, so I will also assume that they contributed 16% of the
overall industrial demand.
*Assumes that of the total industrial and arts
demand of 630.2M ounces, 60% was used in industrial applications. Data for the period 1955-1976 is missing, but
this is relatively insignificant.
From the above, we discover
that the aggregate world demand for the period 1955-2005 was 23.48B ounces*.
*19.4B + 3.7B + .378B = 23.48B ounces
If we subtract this number
from the cumulative mine supply during this same period (19.5B ounces), we are
left with a massive deficit of 3.98B
ounces.*
*Interestingly
enough, in 1941 the total world monetary stocks of silver were about 4.5B ounces
(see: Minerals Yearbook
1941 pp. 55-56). When considering that
the above deficit of 3.98B ounces does not account for the period of 1942-1954,
it becomes crystal clear that there is very little cheap silver remaining.
But we have yet to factor in
old scrap supply, which CPM Group, in their 2003 Silver Survey, defines as:
“Scrapped
fabricated objects, old coins, old jewelry, decorative objects, household
objects, a host of industrial waste, spent ethylene oxide catalysts, old
electronic scrap, old sterlingware, old silverware
and finally, photographic chemicals,
films, and papers [emphasis mine].”
Since the vast majority of
old scrap supply has come from spent photographic materials (est. 80% in 2000)
and catalysts (est. 10% in 2000) [see: http://pubs.usgs.gov/circ/c1196n/],
we will assume that 90% of the old scrap that comes to market had its origin in
industry as opposed to the arts (i.e. jewelry, sterlingware,
decorative objects, etc.). We will then
subtract this additional supply from the deficit to arrive at an accurate
estimate of how much silver remains.
*Due to a deficiency of old scrap supply data for the years
1955-1959, some approximations had to be made based upon known ratios of
industrial demand vs. old scrap supply in the neighboring years.
Since we are assuming that
90% of the old scrap came from industrial sources we have:
(-3.98B
ounce deficit) + (5.45B ounce scrap supply x 0.90) = 1.47B ounce surplus for the period 1955-2005.
One other factor to consider
is a loss of silver content in coinage due to abrasion. For the years 1955-2005, coinage demand was 2.73B ounces. Since the vast majority of this demand was
realized between 1955 and 1970 (1.83B ounces worth), I will assume that the
loss due to abrasion was 15% of the total in the ensuing 35 years.
I’m confident this estimate
is conservative for the following 2 reasons:
1.
Obviously these newly minted coins were not the only coins in existence during
this period, and if we were to include all the coinage that was undergoing
abrasion, the above 15% figure would shrink relative to the context of what it
described (e.g. 15% loss due to abrasion of 1B ounces worth of coinage is only
7.5% loss due to abrasion of 2B ounces worth of coinage).
2. Large
amounts of coins were melted down in the late 1970s, contributing considerably
to the surge in old scrap supply during those years. Therefore, my previous assumption that 90% of
old scrap had its origin in industrial recycling is probably over-estimated by
at least 10-30% during the period 1975-1981, since all of those coins that were
melted down would have in effect undergone a 100% loss due to abrasion while
simultaneously contributing to the overall old scrap supply.
3. I’m assuming that the other 900M ounces of
silver coinage minted between 1971 and 2005 underwent no abrasion at all.
For reasons that I will
expound upon in a future essay dealing with the topic of abrasion prior to the
20th century, I feel that the above estimate of silver lost to
abrasion should be several orders of magnitude higher. But for the sake of conservatism, I will work
with the above number of 0.27B ounces.
Thus, at year-end 1954 we
begin with 18.4B ounces of silver existing in all forms, and through the period
1955-2005 which witnessed the rise of the electronic age, it appears we only increased
the overall supply of silver by 1.2B ounces, even though we mined almost 20B
ounces from the ground! This leaves
us with a total of just 19.6B ounces of silver left in existence!
Now, there will likely be
some misgivings about the weight I have attributed to the statement from the
1954 Minerals Yearbook, which said,
“one-third [of total silver production] has been misplaced or dissipated.”
One might well wonder what
exactly is meant by ‘misplaced’? In order to error towards overstating the
amount of silver that remains, so as to avoid as much skepticism as possible,
let us assume that 20% of the misplaced silver referred to in the Minerals Yearbook dated 1954 has since been
found. This would then leave us with 7.36B
ounces of ‘lost’ silver during the period 3000BC-1954AD, instead of the
previously stated 9.2 billion ounce loss.
All in all, this has the effect of raising the amount of silver left in
existence by 1.84B ounces. Thus, our
conservative total now stands at 19.6B+1.84B = 21.44B ounces.
Now to compare our findings
with those of the CRA Report published in 1992.
From the CRA Report
(Year-end 1991)
“CRA estimates that from 1921 through 1990, 10
billion ounces were irrecoverably lost in
Note: The above estimate is fairly close to the one made in the 1954 Minerals Yearbook.
Before evaluating the CRA
Report’s findings, let’s make use of the above statement to make one more
estimate of how much silver remains.
1.
According to my data, the world produced a total of 45.38B ounces of silver from 3000BC-2005AD.
45.38B
-12.6B (silver “irrecoverably lost in
2. From
3000BC to 1920 the world produced about 22.17B ounces, and of this total I
estimate that 25% was lost to abrasion (vast majority), shipwreck, or even
buried as treasure (including silver buried in tombs).
32.78B
– (22.17B x 0.25) = 27.24B ounces of
silver left in existence when accounting for silver lost during the period
3000BC –1990AD.
3. From
1991-2005, the world’s industrial demand for silver was 8.63B ounces.
During this same period the
world supplied only 2.5B ounces of old scrap.
Assuming that
90% of the old scrap had its origin in recycled industrial materials as before,
we are left with:
27.24B ounces – (8.63B – (2.5B x 0.90)) = 20.86B ounces of silver left in existence when accounting for all
the silver lost from 3000BC – 2005AD.
This number
varies by less than 3% of our
previous 21.44B ounce estimate.
Back to the CRA Report.
Here’s what it had to say
about how much silver remained in 1992:
Total Silver that remains
above-ground (all forms): 19.06
billion ounces
Total Silver contained in
silverware and art forms: 16.48
billion ounces
Total Silver contained in
bullion form: 1.40 billion ounces
Total Silver contained in
coin and medallion form: 1.18
billion ounces
Updating
the CRA Numbers
During the
period 1992-1994: World mine production of silver totaled 1.373 billion ounces
(Minerals
Yearbooks).
During the
period 1995-2004: World mine production of silver totaled 5.639 billion ounces
(The Silver Institute).
During 2005
(Partial): World mine production of silver in 2005 totaled 527.3
million ounces (CPM Group – Silver
Survey 2005).
Total World Mine
Production from 1992 to 2005 = 7.54
billion ounces
Combining this
number with the CRA Report’s estimated total above-ground supply of 19.06
billion ounces, we arrive at 26.6
billion ounces of silver remaining above ground.
Since 1992, the
world has used nearly 8.1B ounces of
silver industrially, but has only returned 2.4B
ounces as old scrap. Assuming that 90%
of the old scrap had its origin in recycled industrial materials, this leaves
us with a total of just 20.66B ounces [26.6 – (8.1B – (2.4 x 0.90)]
remaining above ground. This number is
strikingly similar to our 2 other separate findings of 21.44B ounces and 20.86B
ounces.
By taking the
average of all three, we arrive at 20.99B ounces of silver remaining in the world
in all forms (mostly jewelry and silverware).
But in order to
temper our enthusiasm in discovering what would actually be a relative rarity
ratio between gold and silver of less
than 1 to 5 based upon the above numbers, let us further assume that a
maximum of 4 billion ounces of
silver could be recycled from existing industrial (not including jewelry or sterlingware) materials if the price were right (say
$50-$100/ounce). Including this
additional potential supply, 24.99B ounces of silver would remain in all
forms.
Here then is our
new gold to silver ratio based solely upon relative rarity, buffered for the
sake of being conservative with that extra 4 billion ounces. Again, I hope the inclusion of this
additional 4 billion ounces will be a more than sufficient compromise to
account for my inevitable bias towards silver.
The new gold to
silver ratio is 24.99 billion ounces Ag/ 4.25 billion ounces Au (see Part 1)/
=
1
to 5.88 (Gold
vs. Silver)
This means that based solely upon
relative abundance, silver should be trading at about $110.50/ounce
(using a gold price of $650.0).
Patience, it
seems, is destined to pay some incredible dividends.
Conclusion
Clearly, silver is not more rare
than gold, but a 1 to 5.78 rarity ratio is indicative of the incredible
leverage to be found in all silver related investments since the current ratio
stands at roughly 1 to 54. Will it ever reach the ‘magical’ 1 to 5 ratio
insisted upon by Bunker Hunt over 30 years ago?
That remains to be seen. But at
least now we know for certain that such an idea isn’t nearly as far-fetched as
it might have otherwise seemed.
Contact: david@silverinscripture.com
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Sources, Updates, and
Validation
Sources for Calculations Used in “The
Real Silver Deficit”
Ø
CPM
Group’s Silver Survey 2003 & 2005 (www.cpmgroup.com)
Ø
US
Geological Survey (USGS)
o
http://minerals.usgs.gov/ds/2005/140/
o
http://pubs.usgs.gov/of/2004/1251/2004-1251.pdf
o
http://minerals.usgs.gov/minerals/pubs/commodity/silver/
Ø
Minerals Yearbooks
1932-2004
Ø
The
Silver Institute (www.silverinstitute.org)
Ø
Stocks of Silver Around the World (Charles River Associates, 1992)
Further Validation of the 60+ Year
Structural Silver Deficit
“Since 1946 the industrialized nations
[i.e. the free-world] of the world have consumed
more silver than they have mined, to meet growing demand…” (pg. 3)
-Sarnoff, Paul. Silver Bulls: The Great Silver Boom
and Bust.
A New Data
Point for “The World’s Cumulative Silver Production”
Total
Silver mined from 4000 B.C. through 1991: 37.5
billion ounces
Source: Blanchard, James.
Silver Bonanza: How to Profit from
the Coming Bull Market in Silver.
Since mine
production from 1992 to 2004 was about 7.0 billion ounces (Part 1),
the new total is 37.5 billion ounces + 7.0 billion ounces = 44.5 billion ounces
Previously,
the average cumulative silver production based upon 5 sources was 45.55 billion
ounces.
With this
additional data point, the world’s cumulative silver production is now the even
more certain figure of 45.38 billion
ounces.
Disclaimer: I am not a financial advisor. Information contained within this essay must
not be construed as investment advice.
Do your own due diligence, because everyone has a bias.