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The Gold-to-Silver Ratio Is Screaming BUY at Investors

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The gold-to-silver ratio says silver is an incredible deal

Peter ReaganBullion.Directory precious metals analysis 19 February, 2024
By Peter Reagan

Financial Market Strategist at Birch Gold Group

The price of silver has declined from nearly $26 per ounce back in December to approximately $23 today – an 11.5% drop. In December, we thought silver was a good investment opportunity based on the gold-to-silver ratio. Considering the current lower silver price, the gold-to-silver ratio has risen even higher.

Today, silver seems even more appealing than it did at year-end.

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Briefly, the gold-to-silver ratio indicates how many ounces of silver are needed to buy one ounce of gold. Since both silver and gold price fluctuate based on supply and demand, their prices move independently over the short term. Over the long term, gold and silver prices are highly correlated… And that’s why the gold-to-silver ratio can be an extremely useful indicator for us.

A high gold-to-silver ratio suggests that silver might be undervalued. In December, the ratio was 81 to 1, well above the average range (between 40 and 60 to 1). It has since increased some 10% and at the moment sits at 89.5 to 1.

We think it’s wise to diversify with silver as a long-term hedge against inflation when combined with gold.

Looking ahead, industrial demand for silver is forecasted to increase significantly over the next decade. Silver is a key component of solar panels, batteries, electric vehicles and other “green” technologies.

The long-term prospects for silver remain robust. The elevated gold-to-silver ratio indicates positive signs for silver in the short term, particularly if the Fed decides to lower interest rates later this year. Remember, lower interest rates and other “easy money” conditions tend to benefit investments in tangible assets like silver and gold.

With the Fed anticipated to resume monetary stimulus soon by lowering rates and financing global conflicts through increased debt issuance, combined with an attractive gold-to-silver ratio, we think it’s smart to accumulate silver now.

Diversify with precious metals as well as within precious metals for the long-term.

 

Why might China under-report its gold reserves?

Ever since we heard the idea of China under-reporting its gold reserves, we’ve hoped to see a detailed analysis on the how and why. Speculation as to how big the actual reserve is vary depending on how bullish the analyst is on gold.

Double the official report was a lower-end figure we’ve come across, while the other end of the spectrum placed China’s hoard in the ballpark of a gargantuan 30,000 tons.

Numismatic News’ Patrick A. Heller, whose view on the matter we haven’t previously covered, believes the hoard is over 30,000 tons, or as he calls it, a billion ounces.

Heller doesn’t necessarily believe China’s central bank has a warehouse with 30,000 tons of bullion, but it doesn’t need to.

He’s well-aware of the line between public and private sectors being kind of nonexistent, not unlike as in the case of Russia. Heller outlines four ways the Chinese government could own gold:

  1. A larger-than-reported gold hoard held directly by the central bank
  2. Chinese sovereign investment funds (of which just one has $200 billion in capital for “currency allocation” purposes)
  3. The Chinese military, both directly and through business fronts
  4. Gold held in the inventories of government-owned business entities

Interesting and highly believable, but Heller is only getting started. He notes:

But what could be the reason the Chinese government would want to build the world’s largest hoard of physical gold? In my judgment, as many others have said, he who owns the gold rules.

Physical gold has been used as a financial asset for 6,000 years and never failed. With that track record, it would be the ideal asset to accumulate to win an economic war.

…Do I think that the Chinese government plans to inflict an economic World War III on the U.S. and other nations at some point? I do.

Again, not exactly difficult to believe, especially during power struggle between BRICS countries and the West. It’s been said many times that a credible gold-backed sovereign currency would, by definition, doom all free-floating fiat currencies. There would be no reason to own an asset that’s constantly depreciating when there’s a highly liquid alternative form of money that doesn’t suffer from inflation.

If we’ve established that China does indeed have sufficient gold to make such a move – dragging the world, kicking and screaming, back onto a gold standard – why wouldn’t they do so immediately?

Well, there are a few reasons… China may want a weak yuan to keep its exports inexpensive for the rest of the world, especially during a time when attempting to prop up its industrial sector.

Consider also that China still has some trillion dollars of U.S. debt. If we go to war (economic or military), the value of those IOUs will go to zero. How much that actually matters to Chinese leadership is an open question.

Furthermore, a move to the gold standard wouldn’t just doom the U.S. dollar – it would likely take down all other free-floating, unbacked currencies. Including the ruble, the rupee and the real (the currencies of other major BRICS members). Until Russia, India and Brazil (not to mention the other BRICS members) are ready for this sort of change, the announcement of a gold-backed yuan would cause problems for them as well.

Heller’s analysis is interesting not just because of speculation on the gold hoard and plans for it, but also because it gives good reasons why China isn’t acting on them (yet). Any plan to establish the yuan as the global reserve currency, the talks of which have been around for the better part of the decade, would have to be a slow-moving one.

And if such a plan exists, when China finally declares its bid for the top spot of global economic superpower, the U.S. will no longer be in a position to contest it.

 

Americans want gold more than any other investment (it’s not even close)

What’s the most accurate gauge of sentiment these days? Like it or not, search engine results are a likely candidate. So we like that a recent study commissioned by The Lazy Trader used precisely this to try and determine what the most popular investment in the U.S. is right now.

Investor-only polls can hardly paint the full picture.

The study will be more surprising to some and less to others, but the difference in searches will probably turn most heads. Gold occupies first place with nearly 1.2 million monthly searches, with silver in second place with a little over 677,000 searches.

After third-place oil, there is a precipitous decline to gas as fourth place, and then an even steeper one to foreign currencies (forex), real estate and commodities, each of which gets around 85,000 searches or lower.

Gold had as many searches as the fourth through fiftieth most popular assets combined. Taken together, gold and silver had more searches than every other asset combined.

We also found this quote from the source curious:

Gold garnered a monthly average search volume of almost 1.2 million, as high interest rates and lingering concerns about recession intensified gold’s appeal.

As we move closer towards rate cuts, recessionary concerns have actually abated, though they remain in a kind of lingering “will it happen” discussion.” And because high rates mean higher yields, they should have hammered gold’s appeal, not stimulated it, as we’re so often told.

If investors are searching for gold now, what will happen when yields once again sink and inflation once again ramps up? Because, unlike a recession, those are things that the markets have priced in as a certainty. Whether we want to add a recession to the mix or not, it seems that things are looking better for gold on the consumer end than the mainstream has been telling us.

As another point, we’re glad to see platinum make 10th spot, which tells us that investors seem to be noticing that there are more than just TWO precious metals.

The signs we’re seeing in the platinum market point to a near-term price recovery.

Peter Reaganbullion.directory author Peter Reagan

Peter Reagan is a financial market strategist at Birch Gold Group, one of America’s leading precious metals dealers, specializing in providing gold IRAs and retirement-focused precious metals portfolios.

Peter’s in-depth analysis and commentary is published across major investment portals, news channels, popular US conservative websites and most frequently on Birch Gold Group’s own website.

This article was originally published here

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