Silver demand 10% up in 1H
Investors flocked to silver-backed
exchange
Traded products and silver bullion
coins!
Silver’s
role as a valued investment was broadly on display during the first half of
2020, as investors’ actively accumulated silver in the first six months of the
year, leading to a 10 percent gain in investment demand. Paving the way was
remarkably strong growth in silver-backed exchange-traded products (ETPs),
which have posted successive all-time highs this year, together with solid
silver coin and bar investment.
The
silver price averaged US$16.65 through to the end of June. Having fallen
sharply in mid-March, the silver price has since recovered strongly, rising by
56 percent to reach US$17.84 at end-June; it has since broken through the US$18
barrier. The gold: silver ratio the quantity of silver ounces needed to buy an
ounce of gold fell since its multi-decade high of 127 in March, and at
end-June stood at 97.8, which is still very high by historical standards, and
may signal that silver is undervalued relative to gold.
At
Silver Investment front, retail and institutional inflows into silver ETPs have
been impressive this year. As of June 30, global holdings reached a fresh
all-time high of 925 million ounces (Moz), which is roughly 14 months of mine
supply. The ETP growth in the first half 2020 of 196 Moz comfortably surpassed
the highest annual inflow of 149 Moz set in 2009. North American listed funds
accounted for some 90% of the ETP inflows since March.
Retail
bullion coin sales jumped by an estimated 60 percent year-on-year. Silver bar
and coin sales surged in response to a deteriorating economic outlook linked to
the global COVID-19 pandemic, leading to some supply-chain disruptions. This
saw dealer stocks for several silver investment products quickly depleted,
resulting in extended delivery lead times and higher premiums.
The
recovery in professional investor activity in May and June reflected improving
sentiment towards silver amongst these investors particularly as a leveraged
play on gold. This trend was clearly reflected on COMEX. Although net managed
money longs ended June at 176 Moz, posting a 40 percent decrease compared with
end-December 2019 levels, this hides a marked improvement within the first six
months, with net longs improving quite sharply between early May and end-June.
In
China, improving price expectations and a rise in price volatility has also
revived investor interest. Silver trading volumes on the Shanghai Futures
Exchange recorded their highest monthly total for the year in May, while
turnover on the Shanghai Gold Exchange remained elevated after hitting record
levels in March.
Looking
at Industrial and Jewelry Demand front, not surprisingly, the Covid-19 crisis
negatively impacted silver fabrication demand in the opening half of the year.
After a sharp contraction in the March-April period, silver industrial demand
has shown signs of improvement from May onwards after many key economies
gradually lifted lockdown measures.
However,
weak consumer confidence and a sharp rise in unemployment weighed on demand in
many end-user applications such as automobiles and consumer electronics. Going
forward, some of this consumer drag could be mitigated by flow through from
various governments’ recently announced infrastructure investment programs,
thereby lifting silver industrial demand.
Looking
ahead, silver jewelry is expected to weather the storm far better than other
precious metals this year. This is due to the relative affordability and
greater suitability to online selling of silver jewelry. Metals Focus, the
independent precious metals consultancy, forecasts an annual decline for global
silver jewelry fabrication of just 7 percent against a projected 25 percent
slump for gold.
That
has certainly been illustrated already by US import statistics, where its
imports of silver jewelry (in US$ terms) have improved from -65% y/y in April
to -41% in May, whereas gold jewelry imports slumped by 91% in April and have
barely recovered to -81% in May.
Michael
Barlerin, Director of the Silver Promotion Service (SPS), an arm of the Silver
Institute focused on stimulating demand for silver jewelry in major
international markets, stated, “In June, we commissioned a consumer research
survey where respondents were asked to evaluate pent-up consumer demand due to
the COVID 19 pandemic. The results were very positive, with 64 percent of
consumers’ surveyed saying they were planning to purchase belated jewelry gifts
and over 50 percent indicating it would be silver jewelry.”
Looking
at Silver Mine Supply side, global silver mine supply is expected to continue
its decline, given the temporary production stoppages of mining operations in
several significant silver mining countries due to the Covid-19 outbreak. Even
with most of the mining operations now back online, global silver mine
production is forecast to dip by 7 percent in 2020.
Silver
Price in Second Half of 2020 outlook is to see, investment inflows into silver
are likely to continue in the second half of 2020. This is primarily a result
of its safe-haven status, a widespread belief among investors that silver is
undervalued in absolute terms in comparison to gold, exceptionally low interest
rates (reducing the opportunity cost of carrying gold and silver), and
unprecedented liquidity injections by central banks.
“As
a result, the silver price is anticipated to surpass the US$21.00 mark in
late-2020, with a fall in the gold: silver ratio to below 90” The Silver
Institute in their report.
The
Silver Institute is a non-profit international industry association
headquartered in Washington, D.C. Established in 1971; the Institute’s members
include leading silver producers, prominent silver refiners, manufacturers, and
dealers.
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