Saturday 30 April 2011

Silver fever is about to break, and break badly


Howard GoldHOWARD GOLD'S NO-NONSENSE INVESTING
April 29, 2011, 12:01 a.m. EDT

Silver fever is about to break, and break badly

Commentary: As mania subsides, a buying opportunity will arise




By Howard Gold
NEW YORK (MarketWatch) — I was just starting to work on a column about silver mania Tuesday morning when a big, beautifully produced ad insert on silver, of all things, arrived with my Financial Times.
Proclaiming that “silver is the single greatest profit opportunity of our time,” the insert featured a huge, nearly three-dimensional replica of a one-ounce U.S. silver eagle, with Liberty herself reaching out her hand and In God We Trust right there for all to see.

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The coin replica, some 3 ½ inches in diameter, shone like a harvest moon, glittering with the possibility of instant riches.
And — you just can’t make this stuff up — it came just a day after silver prices hit their highest level in three decades.
On Monday, silver closed near $50 an ounce, just below where it stood when the Hunt brothers tried to corner the market back in 1980 (although it’s way below that record when prices are adjusted for inflation). On Thursday, it briefly touched a record high at $49.52 an ounce before falling back. Gold extends record run, silver gains 3.4%.
Of course it was a coincidence — the ad, by a Minneapolis coin dealer, was three months in the making, I was told — but it perfectly captured the moment when silver moved into the full-fledged mania stage.
It’s happened with lightning speed. Last summer, before the most recent market rally began after Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke announced a new round of quantitative easing (QE2), silver was still gold’s poor cousin, trading below $20 an ounce .
Since then, it has rocketed more than 150%, and has soared 50% in 2011 alone. Gold, meanwhile, has plodded along with the stodgy old Standard & Poor’s 500 index this year, though it’s up nicely from last year’s lows, too.
In recent weeks, silver fever has reached, well, fever pitch. Silver prices have shot up nearly 20% in April alone, as retail investors piled into the markets and the pros moved en masse into the futures and options pits.
Trading volume of silver futures at CME Group CME -2.24%   hit an amazing 319,205 contracts Monday — more than 50% higher than the previous record last November — and this month the contract’s average daily volume has tripled from last year, the Wall Street Journal reported.
And both individual and professional investors have gone ga-ga for silver exchange-traded funds. On Monday, iShares Silver Trust SLV +0.36%  saw three times the volume of the SPDR S&P 500 SPY +0.18%  ETF, one of the market’s biggest, and SLV’s trading volume was five times its daily average in the first quarter.

For More GOTO...http://www.marketwatch.com/story/silver-fever-is-about-to-break-and-break-badly-2011-04-29#

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