Having read a growing number of reports on a physical silver shortage
- and now gold too - with dealers unable to guarantee delivery time, here
come some additional observations from the German language area in Europe. The dichotomy between the so called global spot
price for the two precious metals and prices paid on eBay Germany has
never been wider than it is these days.
A lot of 100 one oz. silver Maple Leafs were
sold for €1,267 or $18.25/oz Tuesday evening. This is a markup of 40% to the then current spot price of $13.10. It
appears that there is a seller's strike as there are hardly any sizable silver lots on offer.
The gold market shows the same: Offers have dropped
to mere 100 gram
(3.21 oz)
bars which are sporting minimum bids of €2,100 or $ 3,045 which
translates into $948/oz. This is a markup of 17% to
the so called global spot price.
A
desirable 50 gram (1.6 oz) Rothschild gold bar - which are not produced anymore - is listed for another 6 days and
has already drawn a bid of €895 or $1,298; this is 10% above spot.
Having
read reports that South
Africa's biggest refinery has been unable
to fill a 5,000 oz.
order, I can only arrive at the conclusion that these so called global spot
prices which are derived from COMEX paper prices have nothing to do with the
world of truly physical deals. Come on, that's a $4 million purchase - and
now they are finished. Has eBay already established itself as a competitor to
precious metals exchanges?
The loud
uproar in the gold and silver investing community about falling futures -
while demand is still up - seems to be a correct alert to market authorities
that appear to sit on their hands with closed eyes.
The
fundamentals for the metals could not be better. Western central banks
continue to shower more fiat money on their economies while betraying the
public with false statements about their vigilance on inflation. Inflation is
here and it will not go away for geopolitical reasons. Russia is the strong man that controls the
biggest part of energy supplies to Europe. Rumors have it that Putin will
raise natural gas prices by 20% later this year. Prices at European gas pumps
have not come down with crude oil prices, suggesting the market is still
tight, despite what is being said officially.
Both
gold and silver will see another formidable fall season where
"official" prices will soon catch up with actual prices paid by
investors. Silver is especially poised for a meltup,
considering the COMEX shorts. And don't give too much credence to short term
charts these days. As the market is manipulated, charts lose any power of
predictability.
Toni Straka
Editor, the Prudent Investor
Toni Straka
is an INDEPENDENT Certified Financial Analyst (OeVFA,
EFFAS) who worked as a financial journalist for 15+ years and now evaluates
global market trends. Analyzing financial and political news permanently he
wants to share his insight with those who understand that we are in an era of
global redistribution of wealth. The US-European centric approach does not
work anymore. Five billion people in the developing countries now demand
their fair share of the world's resources.
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