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Silver Will Benefit From America’s Debt Crisis

13-8-2019 < SGT Report 32 595 words
 

by Nick Giambruno, Casey Research:



The media hated them.


Big Business, numerous federal agencies, and politicians of all stripes hated them too.


Even Tiffany & Co., the famous jewelry company, vilified them in a full-page advertisement in The New York Times, calling them “unconscionable.”


The villains everyone loved to hate were the Hunt brothers. They were critics of the fiat money system and advocated for hard money based on commodities.



At the time, private ownership of most gold was illegal in the US. So the Hunt brothers turned to the next best thing: silver.


From the late 1970s to 1980, they stockpiled silver. And unlike other investors who settled their silver trades in cash, the Hunts took physical delivery. This often meant flying the silver to Switzerland for storage.


It squeezed the supply… and helped push the silver price up. Its price went from around $6 in the late ’70s to around $50 in 1980.


Chart


But were the Hunts really the bad guys everyone made them out to be?


They did nothing unethical. They just exchanged US dollars for silver from voluntary sellers. In fact, it was a response to the government’s unethical actions…


Longtime readers will recall President Nixon severed the US dollar’s last link to gold in 1971. Without the discipline of gold, there was nothing to stop the US government from printing as many dollars as it pleased. The dollar was now a purely fiat currency.


The Hunts bought silver because they figured the US government’s actions would lead to inflation. And they were right…


The ’70s saw the highest levels of inflation in living memory – even according to the government’s own crooked statistics. See for yourself:


Chart


You see, the silver market is tiny. It’s roughly one-tenth the size of the gold market. So it’s prone to crisis-driven upside explosions as money floods into it during periods of high inflation.


Chart


And today, the stage is set for an explosion in inflation. I expect it to kick off a crisis-driven mania into silver like what happened in 1980.


Adjusted for today’s prices, that means silver soaring above $160 an ounce… almost 10 times the current price.


So let’s look at why silver could be on the verge of a big rally…


The Next Crisis


The same kind of wrongheaded domestic and foreign policies that caused the panic into silver in the ’70s and early ’80s are not only present today, but stronger.


Let’s look at domestic ones first.


In the late ’60s and early ’70s, the US was still on a form of the gold standard that tied gold to the dollar at $35 an ounce.


But runaway deficit spending on welfare and the Vietnam War caused the US government to print more dollars than it could back with gold at the promised price.


By the late ’60s, the number of dollars circulating had drastically increased relative to the amount of gold backing them. This encouraged foreign countries to exchange their dollars for gold, draining the US gold supply at an alarming rate.


To plug the drain, President Nixon severed the dollar’s last link to gold in 1971. Recall this was the event that caused the Hunt brothers to become concerned about the value of the dollar and make their first moves in the silver market.


Today, the financial wastefulness is much worse.


Read More @ CaseyResearch.com





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