Silver Bull Faces Correction

 | Jul 24, 2016 01:18AM ET

Silver’s young bull market got off to a typically-slow start, lagging gold’s own new bull. But recently the white metal surged to catch up in a record summer rally. That left silver very overbought and facing near-term correction risks led by a record futures selling overhang and weak late-summer seasonals. But this strengthening bull still has a long ways higher to run yet before silver prices reflect prevailing gold levels.

Silver is something of an enigma. By the global supply-and-demand numbers, it’s inarguably another industrial metal. According to the venerable Silver Institute which gathers the world’s best fundamental data, industrial fabrication accounted for 50.3% of total demand last year. That was followed by coins and bars at 25.0% and jewelry at 19.4%. Most of the silver mined is consumed, not hoarded for investment.

On the supply front, the Silver Institute found that only 30% of global silver mine supply in 2015 came from primary silver mines. The great majority of silver produced is simply a byproduct from mining base metals and gold. These byproduct miners often think so little of silver that they sell the upside on their production to silver-streaming companies at relatively-low prices. That doesn’t sound like a precious metal.

Yet contrarian investors still love silver with a zeal unparalleled in all the markets. Silver is a tiny market with extreme volatility, so investors can earn fast fortunes when this metal periodically soars higher. At 2015’s average silver price of $15.68, the Silver Institute’s 1170.5m ounces demanded was worth just $18.4b! That’s a rounding error compared to the size of global capital markets, giving silver huge upside potential.

It doesn’t take much capital inflows through new investor buying to catapult silver higher. And usually the catalyst that rekindles silver demand is gold powering higher. Gold has always driven silver, as the silver investors and speculators take their trading cues from gold. They only flood into silver after gold has powered high enough for long enough to convince them its upside is sustainable. So silver lags gold.

That certainly happened in its young new bull. Back in mid-December around the Fed’s first rate hike in 9.5 years, gold and silver carved major 6.1-year and 6.4-year secular lows within days of each other. No one wanted anything to do with the precious metals, they were left for dead. I argued otherwise late last year, pointing out silver’s deep undervaluation relative to gold. Silver was languishing at stock-panic levels.

If such extremes weren’t sustainable in late 2008 in that epic maelstrom of fear spawned by the first stock panic in a century, they certainly couldn’t last without panic-grade fear. And indeed silver soon started to rally, but it really lagged gold’s initial advance in the early months of 2016. By early March as gold entered formal bull-market territory with a 20.1% gain off its secular low, silver had merely rallied 15.0% at best.

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That was terrible relative performance, as silver’s far-smaller market size enables it to leverage advances in gold. Per the World Gold Council, total gold demand in 2015 ran 4193.1 tonnes. At gold’s average price last year of $1159, that works out to a market size of $156.3b. That is 8.5x larger than silver’s! So every dollar of investment capital that flows into silver has 8.5x the upside price impact of a dollar into gold.

By early April gold had rallied 21.0% at best from its secular lows but silver was only up 16.1% at best, not even in a new bull market yet. Some silver investors were getting discouraged, but they didn’t have to worry. Silver lags gold, and was wound like a coiled spring ready to explode as I outlined at the time. Silver finally started outperforming in April, taking its bull-to-date gains to 30.1% versus gold’s 23.1% by month-end.

Following that dazzling April surge into official bull-market-dom, silver was overbought and retreated in May. I didn’t expect much from summer, as silver has a long history of drifting sideways to lower during June, July, and early August even in the strongest bull-market years. Yet silver bucked this summer-doldrums trend to soar in June and early July! By mid-July it had blasted 48.7% above its recent secular low.

By that point gold was up 29.9% at best in its own young bull, so silver’s upside leverage to gold was only running 1.63x. That’s still pretty weak, as silver tends to amplify major moves higher in gold by 2x to 3x. The former is typical, while the latter occasionally flares up when silver grows popular enough to capture investors’ and speculators’ imaginations. While silver hasn’t hit 2x yet, it’s definitely catching up.

With a lot more excitement about silver now than back in early April, traders are wondering where silver is heading next. After such a strong counter-cyclical run, silver is certainly very overbought. So a healthy mid-bull pullback or correction is probable. But from a longer-term perspective, silver’s young new bull market is barely getting started. And silver’s greatest gains historically come late in bulls, not early on.

There are two major short-term risk factors for silver. The most-pressing one is the positioning of silver-futures speculators who are exceedingly long. The secondary one is silver’s weak seasonals this time of year. Let’s start with those. By July 13th, silver had rocketed a spectacular 27.7% higher since its final close in May! That’s a radical new bull-year record utterly dwarfing everything that’s come before.

Between November 2001 and April 2011, silver skyrocketed 1104.7% higher in a mighty 9.4-year secular bull. In 2012 silver consolidated high, not collapsing until the Fed’s gross market distortions spawned by the wildly-unprecedented QE3 began in early 2013. Between 2001 and 2012 which were amazing years for silver, on average by July’s same 8th trading day silver was actually down 1.9% summer-to-date.

Nothing like this year’s incredible 27.7% summer-to-date gains have ever been witnessed before. Silver tends to make a major seasonal low in mid-August, where it averaged 4.0% summer-to-date losses in that bull-year timeframe between 2001 and 2012. There’s definitely a risk silver will soon see some of this year’s massive record upside summer-performance delta erode back down toward normal seasonal levels.

Unfortunately investment demand didn’t play a big role in silver’s anomalous summer strength. That leading SLV iShares Silver Trust (NYSE:SLV) silver ETF is the best daily proxy available for investment capital flows into and out of silver. Its managers have to respond to differential SLV-share buying or selling pressure by buying or selling actual real physical silver bullion, or else SLV will decouple from silver and fail its mission.

Between the end of May and silver’s latest mid-July peak, SLV’s holdings merely grew by 3.8% or 12.8m ounces. That’s far from enough to explain silver’s enormous upside breakout. It wasn’t stock investors who’ve been aggressively buying silver, but futures speculators. The hyper-leveraged bets that these guys make necessitate an extreme-short-term focus, they are momentum players who buy and sell as a herd.

This chart looks at the total long and short silver-futures contracts held by speculators over the last 3.5 years or so. Their long bullish upside bets are shown in green, and their short bearish downside bets in red. Silver’s summer surge and its entire young bull have largely been driven by extreme long-side silver-futures buying by speculators. That ramped their total longs to record levels, for a record selling overhang.