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The
Silver Story
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|
| SILVER
DEFICITS (millions)
|
| 1990
|
<30.8>
|
| 1991
|
<68.1>
|
| 1992
|
<75.7>
|
| 1993
|
<183.8>
|
| 1994
|
<200.6>
|
| 1995
|
<182.9>
|
| 1996
|
<207.6>
|
| 1997
|
<221.6>
|
| 1998
|
<205.0>
|
| 1999
|
<161.5>
|
| 2000
|
<154.9>
|
| 2001
|
<82.7>
|
| 2002
|
<81.3>
|
| 2003
|
<64.2>*
|
| Source:
CPM Group,
Silver Survey 2003
* = estimate |
|
Silver
on Sale
by Doug Casey www.caseyresearch.com
I have said it many times: mining is an
innately risky business. Worse, it’s an impossible business if metals
prices are too low. In the case of silver, during the long bear market
from 1980 to 2003, when silver traded mostly in the $3.50-$5 per ounce
range, there were no major, public, pure silver mining companies that
generated free cash flow. None. The end result was that very few pure
silver producers remained in business. With the exception of a smattering
of mines in Mexico, Peru and very few other locations, it has simply been
uneconomic to produce silver (other than as a by-product). That is not
to say that there haven’t been profitable silver mines, but these are
generally owned by very large mining companies such as BHP Billiton (BHP.Z,
$17.20. SO 3.11 billion). These are not stocks you would buy strictly
for the silver exposure, however, because silver is a minute portion of
the overall value of the company. Which points to one of the fundamental
caveats about silver: namely that around 80% of new production is a byproduct
of gold, copper, lead and zinc. So silver is produced almost regardless
of its price. That makes primary production of silver even more volatile
and risky than mining in general. ...
More
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Silver
An Economic
Geologists Perspective
by Nigel H Maund
Investor Summary
The fundamentals behind the world silver
market are looking increasingly strong. Silver bullion stocks of central
and investment banks are at an all time low, or, in many cases, totally
depleted. The demand for silver, especially in the diverse high technology
and medical market segments (40%) is steadily increasing, as is the investment
market segment in silver coins and bullion. The analogue or standard photographic
segment, a substantial industrial market for silver, diminished in the
last calendar year by a matter of a few percent only, despite the much
vaunted demise of the silver market posed by advent of digital photography.
A substantial proportion; i.e., 70% of the "Old Silver Scrap" market,
comprising some 22% of the total market supply, was provided through the
recycling of photographic film and paper. Hence, demand for silver in
the photographic market is 85%, met through recycling within this segment.
Furthermore, the "take off" of the digital camera market is restricted,
in large part, to the young and relatively affluent (professional and
young) market segments in developed economies ...More
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the like) available on this site. In no event shall SilverStrategies.com
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action taken in reliance upon the information provided
herein. |
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