Silver Offering Undervalued Opportunity for Risk-Taking Investors

 | May 05, 2023 11:52AM ET

Silver and gold — two precious metals with a rich history, and they are thick as thieves. Investors can learn a lot from their market dynamics and correlation, especially when silver is so cheap. (Is it?)

In this article, FBS experts delve into the fascinating world of these two assets to explore the historical context of the gold-silver ratio, and assess the present market landscape.

h2 Historical Perspective on the Gold-Silver Ratio/h2

The gold-silver ratio (GSR) represents the price of an ounce of gold in ounces of silver. The correlation between these two metals has been recorded since the 1600s. Since the early 1900s, the GSR has ranged between 17 and 100, with the data from 1950 till the present day averaging out at 40-50.

  • From 1919 to 1940 the gold-silver ratio soared from 18.50 to 99.76, mostly because of the shift to a fiat-backed system following the establishment of the US Federal Reserve in 1913.
  • Later, the ratio fell significantly. Despite gold having a fixed price as of 1933, the ratio began to see a real drop in 1940. After the International Monetary Fund was established in 1944, one dollar was valued at 0.888671 grams of fine gold, or $35 an ounce. At the same time, silver didn’t have those limitations and soared from $0.35 in 1940 to $2.38 in 1968, causing the GSR to reach its lowest point of the century at 16.76.
  • The ratio made a second bottom in 1980 after US inflation reached double digits the year before. On January 21, 1980, also known as “Silver Thursday”, the gold fixing came to $850. This date has become the highest point for silver. It reached $39, and then fell to $12.6 over the next four months.
  • Prices were highly volatile but still moving inside the historical model. However, after Silver Thursday, its price continued to decrease faster than gold’s. The GSR started to gain an upside momentum.
  • The peak of 94.83 was reached in 1991, after the start of the 1st Gulf War.
  • Another rapid growth occurred near the end of 2008 amid fears of economic uncertainty, the subprime crisis, and so on. The rate surged from 52 to 76 and decreased over the next three years.