Gold and silver are the metals that are most in demand for jewelry,
which is another commonality between them. In some countries, jewelry is
being used as a store of wealth, which means it doubles as a currency.
Gold and Silver also are very useful industrial metals for purposes of
electricity, heat conductivity, malleability and industrial uses. Gold
and silver are in fact the most useful industrial metals, but due to low
supply and high cost, these metals are only used in high quality
applications. Once the product is mass produced, cheaper metals are
substituted for them to bring costs down if possible. There are also the
speculators in gold and silver, which can be found in the futures
markets, hedge funds and high net worth portfolios. So far, this covers a
lot of common ground, but there are differences.
In terms of the similarity between the two metals, both of them are
considered currency. The mints of many countries issue gold and silver
collector coins. Historically, money that was circulating used to be
made of silver until the cost became prohibitive and cheaper metals were
used instead. Gold was the standard by which all paper currencies were
based, meaning that gold was the ultimate currency. Gold is still being
used today for trade between countries, and talk of gold backed
currencies and central banks buying gold to securitize their paper
currency means that gold is still underlying today's paper money.
t has been said that silver is half an industrial metal and half
currency. This means that silver will react to positive GDP numbers and
large economic growth, where gold may act inversely to GDP depending on
how it is perceived. Gold prospers in the ultimate fear, currency
meltdown, chaos involving government and inflation scenarios. Silver can
act this way as well - but only if it hits the common person and if
there is no hope left for the currency in the view of the masses. Since
silver is used in so many industrial applications, there can be a
shortage of silver supply, which can lead to price spikes without
crises. Silver is manipulated more often by banks (think HSBC and JP
Morgan) due to its thin volume. It should be noted that this
manipulation is done via paper derivatives, not cornering physical
supply. Should the paper market go askew and the physical market trades
without any link to paper, these market dynamics would change from paper
demand weighing on prices in favour of industrial supply and demand and
the common person looking for a currency alternative.
Gold tends to be mined and it tends to exist in some form, because it
does not get destroyed over time. This makes the supply of the metal
fairly stable. Silver is used for many industrial uses, and much of the
silver that is mined may not be recycled. Since gold is the standard by
which paper money is based, many of the players that play gold may be
different than for silver. A large player in the gold market right now
is the central banks. They may also be buying silver, but not nearly as
much. For this reason, the effects of quantitative easing and money
printing differ for gold and silver. Gold is affected first because it
is a currency that can act as a substitute for paper. Silver can do this
as well - but the scale would not be as large - so silver correlates
with gold, but not perfectly. The other factor at play is that gold can
represent large quantities of goods more easily than silver can. One
ounce of gold is worth about 50 times more than an ounce of silver at
the time of writing.
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