Silver: Worst Loss In 7 Years, But More Woe If Biden’s Recovery Plan Stalls

 | Dec 21, 2021 04:41PM ET

All the talk of vehicle electrification and transition to clean energy in the United States has fallen flat for silver, leaving longs with the metal’s worst annual loss in seven years. 

And the industrial case for silver may not get much better in the new year if President Joe Biden’s $1.75 trillion ‘Build-Back-Better’ agenda stalls from opposition by renegade Democratic senator Joe Manchin.  

Silver is one of the key components in the manufacture of electric vehicles and solar panels and Biden’s economic recovery plan has generous tax incentives for buyers of both.

Biden signed into law in November a separate $1 trillion infrastructure bill that sets aside $7.5 billion to create a nationwide network of electric-vehicle charging stations. Another $65 billion will go toward various clean energy and renewables for the nation's electricity grid.

Where silver might benefit most is the tax credit in the Build-Back-Better plan that cuts as much as $12,500 from electric vehicle purchases. The plan also grants a 10-year solar tax credit that cuts the cost of rooftop solar by up to 30%. These incentives are seen as rather supportive for the purchase of electric vehicles and solar panels, and could materially boost prices of silver and speciality metals involved in the cleaner energy transition.

Silver is often called “gold’s poorer cousin” on the basis that an ounce of it is worth 80 times less than that of the yellow metal.  

But as 2021 winds to a close, it’s not just the price of silver that’s taking a beating. Silver’s losses are 2-½ times that of gold this year and the worst since 2014 for the so-called white metal.

As of Monday’s settlement of $22.27 for an ounce traded on New York’s COMEX, silver was down almost 16% on the year from the December 2020 close of $26.47. Gold futures, in contrast, are down just over 6% on the year. 

COMEX silver’s year-to-date loss is also the most since 2014 when it fell 19.5%.