In 2001 I was asked to write
the “Ten Rules of Silver Investing” for the
investing rules book published in Great Britain in
2001. The complete title of this book is The
Global-Investor Book of Investing Rules—Invaluable
Advice from 150 Master Investors. My portion is
available for free to anyone on the Internet willing
to sign up
here. In this week’s article, let us examine
Silver Investing Rule Number Six.
What’s yours is yours - so
keep it that way.
While it is wise to keep some
of your silver where you can get to it easily, it is
also important to keep the bulk of your metal in a
safe place—especially as your holdings increase.
However, if you establish an account with a
brokerage warehouse or other public storage
facility, you should make sure your holdings are
kept segregated and that you can inspect them when
you wish.
Anyone who has studied the
Silver-Investor.com Web site knows there is far
more paper silver than real silver in the world. In
last week’s article, we discussed the fact that
there is 100 times as much paper silver as there is
actual metal. Certainly, I am not the only silver
commentator pounding the table on this point, and we
will look at a few more in this article.
In fact, my primary premise is
that the real sustained move up in silver will not
occur until the market recognizes this fact. You
certainly can participate in alternative precious
metals investments such as pool accounts or options,
but remember, you are dealing in the paper world and
should expect settlement in paper not in metal. I
wish to be crystal clear: fully paid COMEX warehouse
certificates held by you in your name do comprise
real silver.
Many commentators have
questioned various certificate programs from
locations far and wide.
Ted Butler has described how
there are maybe “billions of ounces of silver
represented in bank certificate form that have no
real metal backing.” Ted goes on to state that bad
things may happen to the owners and issuers of those
unbacked silver certificates when the price of
silver explodes. Butler mentions that banks all over
the world, and in particular Swiss banks, have
issued many of these silver certificates. Butler’s
conclusion is that you should, if you own silver in
any questionable paper form, switch to an
unquestioned form.
Jason Hommel has begun a
dialogue with the Perth Mint on their certificate
program and recently wrote to
various agencies of the government of Western
Australia. Hommel states in his open letter to these
various government agencies, “You (Western
Australian Government) may have a growing precious
metals liability of over 880 million Australian
dollars at the Perth Mint, which is backed by you,
the government of Western Australia.”
Hommel states he has
received about 30-50 complaints about the Perth Mint
over the last few months from investors who have
tried to purchase silver bullion coins, kilo bars,
100-ounce bars, and 1,000-ounce bars and have had
their orders refused or delayed. The way to
de-leverage the whole system is to take real metal
into your possession.
Be real, but get real to begin with. In other words,
we have always advocated beginning a precious metals
portfolio with the real metal first; once that is
accomplished, if you wish to speculate further you
can then branch out into other areas such as mining
equities or other speculative situations.David Morgan
E-mail:
ibtimes@silver-investor.com
Mr. Morgan has followed the
silver market daily for over thirty years. Much of
this Web site,
www.silver-investor.com, is devoted to education
about the precious metals.