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The Silver Investor looks at the Silver ETF Past and Future.
Many pundits have written about the Silver ETF and of course we also had our
say. We thought it best to put into the public record our exact thoughts from
the past as presented in our monthly reports before commenting further. As
the reader will determine we presented some interesting points and we were
not completely correct in our opinions, but as usual did our best to present
information that would not only be useful to our subscribers but also give
them pause to ponder the longer-term implications.
From the December 2005 issue of "The Morgan Report" the following was
written:
"We have continued our investigation into the Silver ETF and decided to give
our views both for and against. Originally we stated that we thought the fund
would be beneficial for the silver market, and we still hold this view; however,
more details are required behind our thinking.
The first and most important fact to address is that the Silver ETF and all
ETFs, to our knowledge, are cash settled. This simply means that the underlying
asset may be there in various forms, but the investor in the fund can only
accept cash as payment. This of course is true of Central Fund of Canada, as
we have mentioned previously.
What the proposed Silver ETF requires is real silver, but not necessarily
new purchased silver. In fact the proposed amount for this issue is about 130
million ounces of silver to begin. This is almost exactly the amount reportedly
purchased by Berkshire Hathaway in 1997. We have absolutely no inside knowledge
but wish to illustrate a point. Suppose a large holder of real silver were
to "pledge" the metal under some type of derivative scenario. The ETF would
be up and running, and real metal would be "behind" the transaction.
This would qualify and would not really cause any new silver purchases to
take place. So in effect, new money would come into the silver market but it
would not necessarily require new silver to be purchased. However, that would
just be at the beginning, and if the silver ETF showed the kind of participation
the gold ETF enjoyed, more and more real silver would be demanded and this
would be difficult to supply at some point. So, eventually, new metal would
be required to back the ETF and at that point, the effect of a tight supply
should manifest in price pressure. However, the cash settlement process avoids
any settlement problems.
Currently, we think the Silver ETF will not be approved, and the reasons will
be that it is too small a market and gold is a unique case. Gold has enough
aboveground supplies and fairly wide market breadth, unlike silver, which is
a very tiny market. If we are correct and this news becomes widespread, it
should still help the silver market, because those paying close attention may
view this as confirmation that silver supplies are indeed tight and new silver
purchases may take place.
Another key factor is that some enterprising group or individual might start
a private fund with characteristics similar to the proposed silver ETF. Barclays
Capital could even start a silver ETF outside of the U.S. markets without SEC
approval, in England for example.
As the Texas Hedge article by T. Stein and S. McIntyre pointed out,
if the silver ETF turned out to be as popular as the gold ETF, it would generate
billions in demand. Each billion dollars in new demand is equal to 125 million
ounces in demand. Two or three billion in today's world is nothing; each billion-worth
of purchases would equal the entire Comex supply. Several questions remain,
and we will continue to monitor the situation as it develops." End quote.
Later in the April 2006 report we stated the following,
"Many times we have stated whatever is good for the gold market will eventually
become good for the silver market. For example, James Turk had goldmoney.com
and only worked with gold, but as we know, now deals in silver as well. The
gold ETF was begun and we all know the silver ETF is one step closer with the
SEC approving the AMEX listing with a rule change. Barclays now will submit
a registration statement to the SEC for approval. Once approved, the silver
shares can begin trading; this could happen in a few weeks or may take months.
We will have to wait and see.
Opinions run the gamut. For example, Bill Murphy of the Gold Anti-Trust Action
Committee states, "I am no fan of this ETF, because Barclays is behind it.
Barclays has been the most notorious gold bear for the last five years and
has been WRONG for the last five years. Even now they are calling for $350
gold within two years. I don't trust them with this ETF any more than I can
throw them."
Others see the silver ETF as a huge opportunity for both institutional investors
and individual investors to participate in the silver market. According to
the documentation, the silver ETF will be backed by physical silver held in
allocated accounts.
The main question is how much silver will be bought through this vehicle?
It is our guess that perhaps 25 million ounces of silver will be required within
a relatively short time once the iShares Silver Trust shares begin trading.
The gold ETF has about 15.5 million ounces of gold currently. This is approximately
$8.25 billion. Since gold is much more accepted as an investment, we do not
expect silver to have the same amount of demand as gold, at least not initially.
However, once established, interest in silver and silver investing should
pick up quickly; we see at least one-tenth of the amount of money going into
the gold ETF going into the silver ETF. This would imply almost a billion dollars,
which, at $10 silver, is equivalent to 100 million ounces of silver, or 25
million more ounces of silver than the bullion dealers have at the Comex (73M
in the registered category).
CPM Group has stated, "One of the misunderstandings common in the silver market
is that there are hundreds of millions of ounces of silver in inventories in
London and Zurich. There is not nearly that much. There may be between 75 and
100 million ounces in these bank vaults as of early 2006."
We agree with CPM and think that between what Berkshire Hathaway holds in
London (100 million ounces?) and what the European banks hold (another 100
million), maybe 200 million ounces of bullion exists throughout Europe. No
one is certain of the exact number or if Warren Buffett still is holding silver,
but we think he still does. The point is, silver is in tight supply and the
silver ETF should exert upward pressure on the price, especially as some gold
investors start to move into the silver ETF, either as spread trading or outright
new long positions.
We picked up an interesting fact about the silver ETF reading the full document
file. According to this filing, "Authorized Participants that wish to redeem
a Basket of Shares will receive the Basket Silver Amount in exchange for each
Basket surrendered. JP Morgan Chase Bank, N.A., London Branch will be the custodian
for the Trust and responsible for safekeeping the silver." Followed by footnote
29.
Footnote 29 states: "If the total value of the Trust's silver held by the
Custodian exceeds $1 billion, then the Custodian will be under no obligation
to accept additional silver deliveries. In such a case, the Trustee will retain
an additional custodian."
This is a very interesting footnote. Basically, JP Morgan Chase is going to
be responsible for $1 billion worth of silver and that is it. Again, what is
$1 billion worth of silver at $10 per ounce? One hundred million ounces --
approximately the amount we think could be obtained in one fashion or another.
We will continue to watch as the silver ETF story unfolds.
It is our understanding that long term gains in the gold (silver) ETFs would
be taxed as collectibles at 28 percent, according to the gold ETF prospectus.
However, Ian McAvity pointed out that Central Fund of Canada ("CEF") is considered
a passive foreign investment company with shares not convertible into bullion.
CEF is believed to qualify as a PFIC to enable the 15 percent capital gains
tax treatment, which can be an important factor for investors." End quote.
Later in the April report we had this to say, Ted Butler brought out an interesting
aspect of the proposed silver ETF this month. Ted stated, "neither the SEC,
nor the CFTC, nor any industry official has questioned how these ETFs are an
end-run around existing commodity regulation. And that's especially true of
the gold ETFs which have been trading now for a while."
He went on to state, "I think everyone overlooked the issue of no limits or
reporting of large positions in the commodity ETFs. That's a shock to me."
Ted thinks there is a chance that someday the regulators will have to rescind,
or somehow restrict, the ETFs.
At this point in time May 10, 2006 the Silver ETF has 53,996,254 ounces of
silver in trust and is selling at a 4.5% premium. The Silver ETF has a current
value of approximately $773 million which means we are already about three-fourths
of the level that JP Morgan will be "under no obligation to accept additional
silver deliveries" emphasis ours.
What will this mean for the silver market? What if physical demand continues
at the current pace? The amount of physical silver put into trust from Silver
ETFs first day of trading to present time is nearly 54 million ounces of silver.
This is in less than ten days of trading.
What will happen when the total value of the silver exceeds the one billion
dollars? Certainly these questions will provide many with material to keep
the silver market commentaries coming.
On Saturday April 6, 2006 we sent the following to our paid subscribers.
The news on silver continues to flow. We received the following from a very
close source:
At Berkshire meeting now....he said they sold all silver. He said he got
in early and got out early. No sell price/date data given. Says he would
rather hold businesses that have earnings. He thought "copper and some
other commodities" are in a bubble. Didn't really talk about silver other
than he sold it.
We want to thank this most trusted source and are almost certain there will
be some articles on the Internet soon.
Many have commented that it is nearly impossible to deliver the amounts of
physical silver into the vaults without the silver already resting in place.
Berkshire Hathaway's silver was in London and Barclays Silver ETF is in London,
is it the same silver?
Take a guess.
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