Soft And Softer Silver Fundamentals

 | Jun 20, 2016 01:04AM ET

Last week, we asked where then will silver go. Well, the price moved around this week, dipping on Thursday but then rebounding sharply on Friday. It closed up 13 cents from last week. The price of gold rose $24.

This week, the Federal Reserve announced that it will not hike rates. Most economists (and traders) have long been expecting a hike (not us). A hike is tighter monetary policy, and therefore not-hiking is looser. Which means a greater quantity of dollars. Which means higher prices. Everyone knows that (except us).

So naturally, on the announcement, the price of silver blipped up about 20 cents. It continued to drift another 25 cents higher. And then cascaded down almost 65 cents. Almost no one knows that prices, including the prices of the metals, have anything to do with the quantity of dollars (except us). Then the price began drifting higher, had another sharp drop, and drifted back up again. Though it ended the week quite a bit lower than the post-Fed high of $14.85.

Folks, we have to say it. This is all noise. Not the non-hike. That is serious economics that is undermining capital, crushing business profit margins, driving asset bubbles, and ruining pension funds and banks. The Great Fed Falling Interest Rate since 1981 continues.

The price moves on these events. Over the long term, only buyers and sellers of real metal can set the price. In the short term, leveraged speculators can place big bets and thereby push or pull the price down or up from where it would otherwise be.

Let’s take a look at those buyers and sellers of real metal, in the only true picture of the supply and demand fundamentals. But first, here’s the graph of the metals’ prices.

The Prices of Gold and Silver