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Silver Is Getting Too Popular... Right?

By Jeff Clark of Casey Research, editor, BIG GOLD
Thursday, April 7, 2011

It's no secret that the silver market is red hot.
 
As I write, silver American Eagles and Canadian Maple Leafs are sold out at their respective mints. Buying in India has gone through the roof, especially noteworthy among a people with a strong historical preference for gold. Demand in China continues unabated. Silver stocks have screamed upward.
 
So, as an investor looking to maximize my profit, I have a natural question: Is the silver trade getting too crowded, meaning we're near the top? Have the masses finally joined the party such that we should consider exiting? After all, it's not a profit until you take it, and you definitely want to sell near the top.
 
There are several ways to measure how crowded the silver market might be. I prefer to look strictly at the big picture and not get caught up in the weeds. This means I'm looking for signs of market exhaustion or the masses rushing in. Nothing says "peak" more than an investment everyone is buying.
 
So how crowded are silver investments right now? Let's first look at the ETFs.
 
Silver ETF Investment is Puny 
 
At $35 silver, all exchange-traded funds backed by the metal amount to $20.7 billion. You can see how this compares to some popular stocks.
 
All silver ETFs combined are less than a quarter of the market cap of McDonald's. They're about 10% of GE, a company that still hasn't recovered from the '08 meltdown. ExxonMobil is more than 20 times bigger. And this isn't even apples-to-apples, as I'm comparing the entire silver ETF market to a few individual stocks.
 
This is even more interesting when you consider it's the ETFs where most of the public – especially those who are new to the market – first invest in silver. So while the metal has doubled in the past seven months, total investment in the funds is still far beneath many popular blue-chip stocks.
 
Okay, maybe all this money is instead going into silver mining stocks. How does the market cap of the silver industry compare to other industries?
 
 The Silver Industry is Tiny
 
While you fetch your magnifying glass, I'll tell you that the market cap of the silver industry is $73.1 billion. It barely registers when compared to a number of other industries I picked mostly at random.
 
The dying newspaper industry is over 26 times bigger. Drug manufacturers are 213 times larger. Heck, even the gold market is 19 times greater. And here's the fun one: The market cap of the entire silver industry, with all its record-setting prices and stock-screaming highs, represents just one-third of one percent of the oil and gas industry.
 
To be fair, there are a number of sectors that are smaller than silver. Radio broadcasters ($43.2 billion), video stores ($10.9 billion), and sporting goods stores ($2.5 billion) have puny market caps, too. But then again, who's buying DVDs or baseball mitts to protect their wealth from a coming inflation?
 
Silver hardly resembles the picture of an investment that is too crowded.
 
I'm not saying one should rush to buy silver right now. After all, it has doubled in seven months. Unless this is the beginning of the mania, prudence would certainly be called for at this juncture. The price will always ebb and flow in a bull market, and an ebb is overdue.
 
The question, of course, is from what price level it occurs. What if a correction doesn't ensue until, say, a month from now, and the price falls back to... where it is now? I remember some articles in January that insisted silver would fall to as low as $22, and, well, they're still waiting and have in the meantime missed out on some huge gains. For silver to fall back to $22 now would require a 40% drop; not impossible, but I wouldn't hold my breath.
 
Fixating on market timing takes your focus off the ultimate goal. In my opinion, instead of worrying about what will happen next week or even next month, focus on how many ounces you have, and then buy at regular intervals until you reach your desired allocation. This has the added benefit of smoothing out your cost basis. And don't forget to buy more as your assets and income increase.
 
This is a market where you'll want to be well ahead of the pack. Someday in the not-too-distant future, average investors will be tripping over themselves to join in. That will make the market caps of silver investments look more like some of the others in the charts above.
 
Good investing,
 
Jeff Clark
Casey Research




Further Reading:

"People ask me which currency to hold their gold or silver in." Chris Weber says. But "this is not the right question." Here, Chris shares a radical way to view your gold and silver holdings.
 
"In short," Sean Goldsmith tells us, "the world is out of silver." Well, almost. More and more investors are realizing the value of silver as a currency. And supply is shrinking. Read more here: The Most Compelling Argument for Owning Silver I've Ever Heard.

Market Notes


THE BIGGEST NEWS IN THE MARKET THIS WEEK

The biggest news in the market this week: Gold has broken "out of the box."
 
Longtime readers know we've been steady and unrelenting bulls on the ultimate "anti-paper" form of money, gold, for over eight years (since even before we published our "$500 Gold is a Bargain" essay in 2005).
 
We don't do complicated analysis on gold. We don't need to. We know gold is rising because people and their elected representatives have racked up massive government obligations that can't possibly be paid back with sound, honest money. The only way out of these obligations is to pay them back with debased paper currency. The winner in the whole wretched system is "real money," gold.
 
Late last year, gold confirmed our thesis again with a big move from $1,200 per ounce to $1,400. It then "took a breather" and traded in a sideways pattern for five months. Some traders refer to a pattern like this as a "box." As you can see from today's chart, gold just broke out of its box to hit an all-time high. The trend of sound, honest money rising against IOUs issued by bankrupt governments continues...

Gold just broke out of the

In The Daily Crux



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