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Friday, March 20, 2009

Beating Inflation with This "Metal Micro-Cap"

Leaving your money under your mattress isn't exactly the safest bet. It doesn't take a mathematician to figure out that government stimulus plans, bank bailouts, and lower interest rates all add up to inflation. If more money is circulating due to new spending measures, the value of each dollar ― including the money under your mattress ― goes down.

That's why the greatest inflation fighter in the world is under stress. Of course, we're talking about gold. Gold is ― and always has been ― the safest place to put your cash. It has been traded as currency, stockpiled to backup paper money (think Fort Knox), and hedge spend-happy governments. Today, its hedging attribute is important.

Over the past few months, it's become more and more difficult to buy physical gold. Even if you do locate it, what you actually pay is quite a bit more than its spot price.

In many cases, these buyers were willing to spend up to 25% more for gold than its value. That's like your broker taking a quarter for every $1 share you buy.

So, if gold is too expensive, where can investors turn? Well, there's always gold's little brother…

Silver is not commonly thought of as an inflationary hedging tool. That is, until times get tough. And I don't think you can find too many times tougher than right now.

Silver is often referred to as "the poor man's gold." We call it opportunity. You see, during the 1978-1980 precious metals rally, silver showed up late. Almost all of the large gains in silver came in the last few months.

We see the same events unfolding this time around. As we pointed out in the past, gold has always traded for about 16 times as much as silver, until the past few decades. Currently, the ratio sits around 71. When this number falls, silver booms.

Macroeconomics and ratios aside, there is one final reason we expect an enormous silver rally…

About three out of every five ounces of silver come from base metal mines. Roughly 28% of all silver comes from copper mines and another 32% comes from lead/zinc mines. Both of these sources are decreasing ― and in some cases, completely shutting down ― production due to the overall commodity market.

Only 10% of all silver comes from gold mines, which leaves just 30% of the total market to pure silver plays like Coeur d'Alene Mines Corp., Hecla Mining, and Pan American Silver. These serious cuts in production, gives us pure silver investors the inside track to cornering the silver market.

We are seeing a perfect storm brewing in the silver market. If you get in now, you might just beat the rush…

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