By David Morgan
October
30, 2009
A well-known truism is that every investor needs to
start with savings. But what if that “savings” gave
the investor too much exposure to risk? What
investors or people in general need in this
financial environment is savings that don’t
deteriorate. We are in an environment now where the
idea of making money, which is kind of the preamble
to being American, is going away. In other words,
today’s environment is, he who loses the least,
wins, and the way that you do that is to hold a
currency that doesn’t devalue over time.
There really are only two currencies, and they are
gold and silver.
I remember starting my quest in this silver journey
that has been ongoing for several decades, beginning
in the mid 1960s. Silver was the coin of the realm
here in America, through 1964. In 1965, coins were
minted but they did not contain silver. (Just to be
accurate about this, there were some exceptions with
the 50-cent piece.)
The futures market back in the late ’60s and early
’70s had two silver markets, actually. There was the
bullion market that we still have, and there was
also a coin bag market. The bag market consisted of
“junk silver” as it was referred to, which is U.S.
coinage that is 90 percent silver. I remember people
asking questions such as, how can you make money by
buying money?
In other words, the link between the dollar and
silver had been cut but people didn’t even
understand it, because it hadn’t drifted that
far—they didn’t get it. Paper money, silver money,
what the heck is the difference?
In fact, in years hence, many people my age or older
tell me it never dawned on them to obtain the silver
coinage that was available for the taking and hold
on to it. Of course some people saw right away what
was happening, and silver coinage in general
circulation disappeared very quickly.
What you need now is real money and that means
silver and gold. I advocate silver “junk
bags”—quarters or dimes or even half dollars that
are 90 percent silver and placed in bags of
$1,000.00 face value or some fraction thereof, such
as a ½ bag, which is $500.00 face, etc.
Today that full bag of junk silver $1,000.00 face
value is going to cost you probably 12,000 in
Federal Reserve Notes. So they both say a dollar on
them but one’s a little different than the other—one
is real, and the other is a promise, but not much of
one.
Once an investor has accomplished a physical metal
holding in both silver and gold, he or she might
want to speculate. Personally, I favor top-tier,
cash-rich, unhedged mining companies for serious
money.
The next level of risk to reward is a very high-risk
sector but very high reward at times, and that is
the junior mining sector. Let me be clear: I don’t
sell bullion but do advocate that everyone buy coins
and bars of both gold and silver. I think that’s
your best savior in this kind of an environment.
Often the question arises, what percentage of
someone’s assets do you recommend in the precious
metals sector? Let us understand that we’re talking
in a very generic sense here without any kind of
suitability or special circumstances or things like
that. But what range or percentage is recommended
that people allocate through real money?
In The Ten Rules of Silver Investing, I was
asked that question. At that time I said 10 percent;
however, after that was published, my inclination
was to move it up to 20 percent, because the
financial system was becoming much more unstable.
The best investment you could ever make is in
yourself. If you have a going business, put money in
your business, make it stronger, make it better, and
market it better, whatever. Or get an education for
yourself so you can get a better job or a promotion
and so forth. Having said that, you do need some
exposure to the metals, and 10 percent as a minimum
is a good place to start.
The next question of course is how much gold or
silver? This is subject to the individual. The older
you are, the less time you have to recover from a
mistake. Thus, the older you are, the more gold you
should have—so you should probably favor the gold
market. The younger or more aggressive you are and
the more risk you can take, the more you might
consider the silver market. Then there are those who
watch the market carefully (such as I do) and trade
the gold/silver ratio when it seems favorable. If
this is done properly, an investor can actually end
up with more metal, with very little effort.
You could look at it this way: if you’re 50 years
old, you’re 50 percent gold, 50 percent silver; if
you’re 60 years old, you’re 60 percent gold, 40
percent silver, that type of thing. Several people I
know who are in their fifties, sixties, and
seventies believe silver will outperform gold, but
it’s a rougher ride.
I think you definitely should have both, a metals
portfolio; it’s not a metal portfolio. And while
there aren’t very many silver-only bugs out there,
there are more gold-centric people who really don’t
want any silver exposure. And I’m not against them;
I think that they’re going to really see something
that’s going to take their breath away in a couple
years. I think once silver rises above the $25.00
level, there will be an acceleration up in price
that will absolutely astound people. But we’re not
there yet. That’s sort of the end of the story, and
we’ve still got several innings left in this
ballgame.
A couple of weeks ago in my weekly posting I stated,
“I would be much more comfortable saying this is the
final blast-off if silver were hitting $21.00 right
now as gold is trading over $1,000—that would be
confirmation in my book, and I’d be very, very
bullish. Unfortunately, silver isn’t leading the
charge at this time and that is acceptable. It’s
certainly shown some good strength this whole year,
but not quite the amount of strength I would expect
if we were to see all this inflation pouring into
the financial markets. Again, I still suspect that
there’s probably some more recessionary,
deflationary, depression type of news coming.”
Looks like the markets are responding to the
downside—how far and how long is tough to state at
this time.
It is an honor to be.
Sincerely,
David Morgan
Mr. Morgan has followed the silver market for more than 30 years.
He wrote the book
Get the Skinny on Silver Investing. Much of his
Web site,
Silver-Investor.com,
is devoted to education about the precious metals;
it is both a free site and does have a members-only
section. Mr. Morgan has just written a free report
titled, Silver Fundamentals, Fundamentally Flawed,
which can be accessed here:
Free Silver Report. To receive full access to
The Morgan Report, click the hyperlink.
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