Silver Way Undervalued

 | Oct 02, 2016 02:31AM ET

After rocketing higher mid-year, silver has spent most of the third quarter drifting sideways to lower. This has naturally weighed on sentiment, with investors and speculators alike growing more bearish during recent months. Yet silver remains way undervalued relative to its primary driver gold, so silver’s young bull market is far from over. This metal’s upside from here is still massive as it mean reverts higher with gold.

Silver has always been exceptionally volatile, which is partially a function of this market’s relatively-small size. The world’s leading authority on global silver supply and demand is the venerable Silver Institute. It reported total worldwide silver demand of 1170.5m ounces in 2015. At last year’s average silver price of $15.68, that works out to an annual market value of $18.3b. That’s practically a rounding error!

According to the World Gold Council, that metal’s top fundamental-research organization, overall global gold demand in 2015 ran 4218.1 metric tons. At last year’s average gold price of $1159, the global gold market was worth $157.2b. Thus silver’s market is only a little over 1/9th the size of gold’s by the latest available read! So any dollar flowing into silver should have about 9x the price impact of one bidding on gold.

At the end of August, fully 260 of the 500 elite component companies of the benchmark S&P 500 stock index had individual market capitalizations larger than the size of 2015’s global silver market! Silver is such a tiny market in the grand scheme that it doesn’t take much investment buying to catapult its price dramatically higher. This great potential for big and fast gains is what makes silver so alluring to traders.

But they don’t get interested in silver until gold flashes a green light. Gold has always been silver’s primary driver. Investors and speculators tend to ignore silver until gold itself has rallied far enough for long enough to convince them its run higher is sustainable. Then they start moving capital into silver, which rapidly blasts its price higher since it is such a small market. This is exactly what’s happened this year.

Back in mid-December, silver was dragged to a miserable 6.4-year secular low by gold falling to its own worst levels in 6.1 years. Futures speculators widely believed the Fed’s coming rate hikes would devastate gold, despite this metal’s long history of actually thriving during Fed-rate-hike cycles. While gold soon started rallying out of those extreme lows driven by enormous gold-ETF buying, silver lagged gold’s advance.

Silver merely rallied 3.1% to gold’s 5.4% in January, and 4.5% to gold’s 10.9% in February. That was terrible leverage of 0.6x and 0.4x, far below silver’s typical 2x to 3x amplification of gold moves. Like so many other times in history, silver didn’t catch a real bid until traders were convinced gold was heading even higher. That critical sentiment shift for new silver bulls finally began in March, before accelerating in April.

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Silver climbed 3.7% in March despite gold’s 0.6% retreat, and then soared 15.3% in April to gold’s mere 5.1% gain! This 3.0x leverage proved silver was finally picking up steam in the wake of gold’s new bull market. That big April rally catapulted silver up into an official new bull market of its own, gaining more than 20% since its mid-December low. But the real silver excitement started later soon after that Brexit vote.

On that late-June Friday when this vote’s surprise results first became known, silver only surged 2.6% compared to gold’s epic 4.8% single-day gain. But a few trading days later, silver would rocket with a vengeance to catch up. Over a 3-day span straddling the end of Q2 and dawn of Q3, silver soared 2.9%, 2.6%, and 5.0% higher! That giant 10.8% 3-day surge trounced gold’s 2.3%. Silver was really starting to shine.

Unlike gold which hit a major interim high in early July, silver managed to defiantly grind higher heading into early August. By the 2nd silver’s young bull market had extended to a 50.2% gain over 7.6 months! Traders were starting to get excited about the lagging white metal, right when it was ready to roll over into a healthy correction. Over the next several weeks, silver dropped 10.0% on a minor parallel 3.0% gold loss.

Silver faltering again slammed sentiment, spawning widespread doubts about this young silver bull’s staying power. But this mounting bearishness was unfounded. Even at its early-August bull-to-date peak, silver remained way undervalued relative to gold. Silver not only continued to lag gold, but silver’s price was low absolutely and its young bull was far too small per modern precedent to give up its ghost.