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In my article "Silver is too bulky," we examined a hypothetical look at the
average baby boomer placing ten percent of their net worth into the precious
metals, split 50/50 gold and silver. At the time, silver was trading over $15
per troy ounce. Since publishing that article silver has traded over $21 and
is now trading between $17 and $18.
Many in the mainstream understand portfolio diversification, true diversification
as outlined in the Ibbotson
Study, which states that precious metals are the only asset class that
truly moves opposite to stocks and bonds. Now let us look a little deeper into
what a ten percent allocation to precious metals would mean. First, we examine just
how many boomers exist in the United States. The statistics vary, and for
our purposes we will use 75 million baby boomers in the U.S.A.
Is there enough silver if just ten percent of the baby boomer population were
to allocate five percent of their net worth into silver, could it be accomplished?
This might seem like a totally absurd question, yet the answer may begin to
sink into the collective unconscious of today's investor. When the Secretary
of the Treasury uses the words "financial crisis" more than five times in a
recent speech, the attraction to precious metals becomes more urgent.
In the "Silver Is Too Bulky" article, we found the medium net worth of the
boomers was about $180,000. So ten percent of this would be $18,000, but remember,
for the purposes of this discussion we are going to divide our ten percent
allocation to both silver and gold on a fifty-fifty basis. This means $9,000
into gold, and $9,000 into silver!
If ten percent of the boomers allocated $9,000 to buy silver, we would have
7.5 million (ten percent of the boomer population) times $9,000. Pretty simple
arithmetic; the product is $67.5 billion. But wait just a moment! Something
must be erroneous -- the amount of investment grade silver (bullion and coins)*
is about one billion ounces.
At our $18 per ounce, that is obviously $18 billion to purchase the entire
silver supply, including all .999 fine bullion and silver coins! Perhaps now
you can appreciate why the most enlightened financial planners talk in gold
terms only; either they know the silver market is pitifully small (unlikely),
making it extremely attractive, or they feel safer with gold because gold has
become mainstream.
Consider that boomers are defined as being born between 1946 and 1964. During
that entire timeframe each and every boomer had a form of money that is far
different from today. The United States of America was using dollars backed
by silver.
Take a look at the Silver Certificate below.

Notice that this is a certificate and not a "note." Many of you have recently
asked about taking possession of your having your stock certificates mailed
to you as a precaution to the possibility of further financial problems.
This certificate represents that there was a dollar* on deposit in the Treasury
of the United States of America. Additionally this dollar was payable to the
bearer of this certificate on demand. In 1964
the M1 money supply was 153 billion. This would represent a silver supply
of 153 billion Dollars (371
4/16 grain (24.1 g)) pure silver. In familiar terms 371.25/480 = 0.7734 troy
ounces. And in 1964, the United States held 1.2 billion ounces of silver, not
counting the 139.5 million ounces held as a strategic stockpile. Source: The
Silver Institute and Silver Bonanza, page 89.
What kind of silver wealth would that represent? Approximately sixteen ounces
of silver for every boomer born. That's correct -- each boomer had 16 ounces
of silver. However, that was then, and here we are today: the official
silver holdings of the United States Treasury is gone, even the strategic stockpile
is gone.
Along the road from silver-backed currency to today's electronic miracle money,
a funny thing happened. Nearly one hundred percent of these very same boomers
believe with all their might that not only is silver not money, most don't
even know that at one time (during their birth and prior) the only lawful money
was silver.
Silver Coins
Silver Coins can be broken down into several subsets, and for the purposes
of this article some, not all, of the major broad categories will be examined.
One of the main subsets is bullion coins. These mainly comprise silver coins
struck by government mints around the world and include Silver Liberties (U.S.),
Silver Maples (Canada), Silver Pandas (China), and some other lesser-known
bullion coins. Most of these coins are tightly held and many are dispersed
so far and wide that bringing them back to the market is a fantasy. As an example,
some percentage of these coins are held as single pieces, where a single coin
was given as a gift of some type. In those instances it is very unlikely that
these single unitholders are waiting for the day to cash in on their silver
investments. The total amount of Silver "Eagles" minted since inception (1986)
to present is approximately 160 million ounces. If we are generous and round
up to 200 million we can account for Silver Maples, Pandas, and Australian
Silver mintages.
Another subset is loosely defined as "coins." These are known in the trade
as medallions although they have all the characteristics of coins but are minted
privately and often carry the name "silver rounds." Many of these "rounds" are
nothing more than a convenient way to invest in silver and sell for very close
to the spot price of silver. However, there are also many that carry very large
premiums as they are low mintage and used in many instances to signify a certain
group, club, event, historic moment, or what have you; these are normally keepsakes
and in most instances will not be coming back to the marketplace.
The junk silver market is another arena of silver coins. These are coins that
were minted by various governments around the world that trade for their silver
content. The amount of "junk" silver is small at this point because much of
this silver has been melted down and refined into silver bullion for industrial
purposes. However, there is an active market for this type of silver and it
is usually the lowest premium form of silver available for investment. Almost
all of this silver is marked as "investment" and willing to come back to the
market at some price.
The last subset we will discuss is the numismatic market, which is the rare
coin market. This is the collector market and is certainly part of the overall
picture. These coins will not come back to the market for their silver content.
They will continue to trade among silver coin collectors and investors, but
this subset does not represent any significant amount of silver rushing back
into the marketplace. In fact, the opposite is true: this silver (admittedly
small) is not coming back to the market to fill industrial demand.
*Dollar =three hundred and seventy-one grains and four sixteenths parts of
a grain of pure silver. See
coinage act of 1792
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