The
Coming Silver Accident
Theodore Butler
Perhaps "accident" may not be the precise word to describe what I see coming
in silver. After all, Webster’s defines accident as "an unforeseen and unplanned
event or circumstance." While that definition certainly encompasses what I
see ahead in the silver market, I need to add a qualifying adjective to complete
my vision. That word is unavoidable. The silver market is headed towards an
unavoidable accident.
This will not be like any accident you have ever witnessed or experienced.
This is an accident you can fully prepare for, and greatly profit from. This
coming silver accident could favorable and permanently alter your family’s
standard of living and financial security. The great news is that preparations
for this accident are simple and merely depend upon you applying common sense.
At the core of what makes the coming silver accident unavoidable is the immutable
law of supply and demand. Supply and demand ultimately governs how all markets
function. While some markets, including silver, can be artificially controlled
or manipulated in price for long periods of time, eventually such manipulations
must end if they are at odds with supply and demand.
Nothing has been more at odds with the basic law of supply and demand than
the silver market. For many decades, the world has consumed more silver than
it has produced. That has necessitated a draw down of previously produced silver
- the existing inventories. There has never been a situation in any commodity
where such conditions have failed to cause a dramatic price increase. While
supply and demand mandate a sharp price increase, it has not yet come. That’s
the groundwork for the coming silver accident. When it comes, the price will
explode upward and reach levels that are talked about for decades to come.
The primary factors mandating a silver accident are excessive naked short selling
and leasing. Silver has the largest short position
that’s ever existed in anything. This is the key component to the
coming silver accident. The total naked short position in silver measures into
the billions of ounces and towers over real world supplies. This combined short
position includes the COMEX, all other exchanges, forward selling and leasing,
the cumulative issuance of unbacked silver bank certificates, unallocated storage
programs and pool accounts. No other commodity has such a huge naked short
position.
It is, basically, this bloated short position that’s at the heart of the coming
silver accident. It is this same excessive short position that guarantees a
financial windfall for your family. A naked short sale is the sale of something
you don’t own. While common in financial markets, more than 99% of the world’s
population will never sell short anything in their lifetimes. That’s because
it’s an unusual and unnatural financial transaction.
Unbridled short selling can artificially depress the price. That is why we
have restrictions on short selling that date back to the great stock market
crash of 1929. In commodities, there must be a short for every long on every
futures contract. Regulations are supposed to preclude excessive long and short
speculation via speculative position limits, but these regulations have been
abandoned in COMEX silver, despite the efforts of many of us to correct that.
There is one other aspect about short selling that is important to grasp. Whereas
the word "sale" means closure or finality in all the billions of daily world
business and financial transactions, a short sale is always an open or incomplete
transaction. A normal sale marks the end of a transaction. A short sale marks
the beginning of a transaction. A short sale must be completed at some point,
in some way. There is no exception to this rule. Either the short sale is repurchased
and closed out, or that which has been sold short is actually delivered and
the open short sale is closed.
Precisely because all short sales must be closed out guarantees a silver accident.
When I say that silver has the largest short position in history, I am also
saying that silver has the largest number of incomplete transactions in history.
Forget, for the moment, the manipulative and depressing effect this monumental
short position has had on the price.
All short sales must be closed out in someway. With silver, could it be by
delivering silver? Against the billions of ounces of silver sold short, how
much do we have to deliver to close out these incomplete transactions? In the
COMEX warehouses there’s 100 million ounces. That represents most of the known
silver bullion in the world, but it’s mostly owned by investors other than
the short sellers. Maybe there are a billion ounces of silver in the world,
in coins, small bars and silverware, but that’s not eligible for delivery against
the silver short position of billions of ounces. Not only is all the world
silver in existence woefully insufficient to cover the monstrous short position,
but most of this insufficient quantity isn’t even owned by the short sellers.
That’s why I’ve made such a big deal about the uniqueness of a silver short
position that’s larger than existing world inventories. It eliminates one of
the only two legitimate ways in which a short sale can be closed out. That’s
why we’ve never seen any other commodity with a short position greater than
what actually exists. How can you have a short position in anything greater
than what actually exists?
The only remaining legitimate way a silver short position can be closed out
is if it were bought back by the short sellers. From whom are these short sellers
going to buy hundreds of millions and billions of silver ounces from? Or more
correctly, at what price? Since actual delivery is out of the question, the
only way the short sellers can buy back their bloated silver short position
is to get every owner of real silver and every owner of paper silver to sell
out. The price that would be necessary to accomplish that feat would qualify
in any reasonable definition as an accident.
While there is no way to determine when the silver shorts will spook and rush
to cover, time is not on the shorts’ side. They must try, at some point, to
buy back and cover the silver they can’t possibly deliver. It is not important
to know in advance what the actual trigger for the silver accident will be.
All you need know is that with the critical and long-term physical deficit
in silver, the short selling charade must end. Since we can’t determine when,
don’t focus on the timing, focus on the inevitability of a delivery crunch.
Long-time readers know that Investment Rarities has been underwriting my articles
for the past four years. For most of that time, the silver price averaged between
four and five dollars. For the past year, the silver price has been six, seven
or eight dollars. Does this increase mean that the price has finally responded
to the law of supply and demand, and therefore eliminated the chance of a silver
accident?
Normally, a price increase of 50% or 100% in a commodity should be sufficient
to balance any consumption deficit. That’s a big move in any commodity. But
not for silver. That’s because the consumption deficit in silver is unlike
any other commodity deficit. Silver has been in a structural deficit stretching
back for more than a half-century. You don’t undo the damage of 60 years with
a 50% or 100% gain.
There is zero evidence that production or consumption has been impacted by
the price, or that the silver deficit has been cured. There has been no worldwide
rush to find new silver mines in response to higher prices. Silver may have
increased in price, but there has been zero effect on near-term production
increases or substitutions in demand. No one has switched to gold or platinum
jewelry because silver is up in price. The law of supply and demand hasn’t
been affected one bit as a result of the recent price increases. The first
prerequisite for the coming silver accident is very much intact. However, it
takes more than a bullish supply and demand equation to cause a violent price
event. Bullish fundamentals point to higher prices but not necessarily a price
accident. In the silver short position, we have the needed reason, in spades,
for an accident.
As a result of the 60-year structural deficit, we have exhausted just about
all the world’s previously existing silver inventory. That includes just about
all world governments’ silver inventory. When the unavoidable silver accident
occurs, there will be no one to douse the price fire. This can’t be said about
any other commodity.
This fact distinguishes between a gold and a silver accident. In gold, in a
financial meltdown or currency crash (popular reasons given for a gold price
accident), world governments own enough gold to extinguish a price explosion.
In silver, they don’t own enough silver to put out a fire.
It’s rare to be presented with an unavoidable financial accident that you can
personally benefit from. If you find my argument has
merit, then position yourself in silver before the coming accident. If you
wait until the accident happens, it will be too late.
Investment
Rarities, Inc.