Silver Market Is Firm

 | Jul 06, 2015 01:40AM ET

The prices of the metals drooped further this shortened week (Friday was a holiday in the US, as the Fourth of July, Independence Day, occurred on Saturday). The S&P 500 index also fell this week, as did crude oil.

Markets all over the world are beginning to feel shocks from Greece. As we write this, on Sunday evening Arizona time, the Greeks voted “No” to the terms of the bailouts offered them. The simple fact is that Greece cannot pay. What they cannot pay, they will not. What they don’t pay, has to be written off by whomever holds it as an asset. Some of these write-offs will obligate European governments to pay in more euros to recapitalize the now-insolvent entities. For example, countries like Spain that need bailouts themselves will have to contribute to the European Central Bank.

A Greek default is not about the size of its GDP, but about the size of the holes blown out of various balance sheets, where Greek debts used to be marked as their assets. We don’t know precisely how much the Greek government, Greek central bank, Greek commercial banks, and other Greek debtors owe. According to Demonocracy , the total is €360 billion (and they have a very cool infographic to illustrate it). We suspect that, at the end of the day, the number turns out to be greater than that.

The Greek default is a forcible contraction of credit (Keith’s definition of deflation), and bound to be negative for the prices of ordinary assets. That said, something extraordinary has occurred in the silver market this week.

Read on, for the only accurate picture of the supply and demand conditions in the gold and silver markets, based on the basis and cobasis.

First, here is the graph of the metals’ prices.

The Prices of Gold and Silver