Fear May Drive Silver 60% Higher In 2022

 | Dec 22, 2021 06:33PM ET

As the U.S. and global markets rattle around over the past 60+ days, many traders have failed to identify an incredible opportunity setting up in both gold and silver . Historically, silver is extremely undervalued compared to gold right now. In fact, gold has continued to stay above $1,675 over the past 12+ months, while silver has collapsed from highs near $30 to a current price low near $22 – a 26% decline.

Many traders use the gold-silver ratio as a measure of price comparison between these two metals. Both gold and silver act as a hedge at times when market fear rises. But gold is typically a better long-term store of value compared to silver. Silver often reacts more aggressively at times of great fear or uncertainty in the global markets and often rises much faster than gold in percentage terms when fear peaks.

Understanding Gold/Silver Ratio

The gold-silver ratio is simply the price of gold divided by the price of silver. This creates a ratio of the price action (like a spread) that allows us to measure if gold is holding its value better than silver or not. If the ratio falls, then the price of silver is advancing faster than the price of gold. If the ratio rises, then the price of gold is advancing faster than the price of silver.

Right now, the gold-silver ratio is above 0.80 – well above a historically normal level, which is usually closer to 0.64. I believe the current ratio level suggests both gold and silver are poised for a fairly big upward price trend in 2022 and beyond. This may become an exaggerated upward price trend if the global market deleveraging and revaluation events rattle the markets in early 2022.

I expect to see the gold-silver ratio fall to levels below 0.75 before July/August 2022, as both gold and silver begin to move higher in Q1:2022. Some event will likely shake investor confidence in early 2022, causing precious metals to move 15% to 25% higher initially. After that initial move is complete, further fallout related to the deleveraging throughout the globe, post-COVID, may prompt an even bigger move in metals later on in 2022 and into 2023.