GSR is getting closer to 70

will we see this to go under 70???
thanks anslie bullion for this article...
Good article, I'll have to read it properly when I've got time.

First thoughts though I reckon the 300 year average is meaningless, I like how the first chart only goes back to 1971 and if we take the outliers out IE the massive peaks and troughs what's the median GSR!
 
Its got a long way to go to get to the historical average of 12 or 16:1.

I wouldnt even count the last 50 years of manipulation in those figures.
 
Long ago there wasn't a lot of industrial uses for silver, and 60 years ago they were removing it from circulating currency, so for the last 60 years there would have been ample stockpiles of old currency silver for the current industrial use. But I reckon they might be running out of this old silver and probably having to rely more on newly mined silver. I have no hard data, so this is just a theory of mine.
 
At the site I'm on, Grasberg in the mountains of Papua Indonesia, they mine copper with significant Gold/Silver/PGM inclusions. Reading through their Geological Reports recently and across the 4 different orebodies they are mining inside the mountain, the GSR is between 3 and 5 :oops:
They are producing ~1.3-1.5Moz of gold per year so not "trace" amounts ;)
 
Long ago there wasn't a lot of industrial uses for silver, and 60 years ago they were removing it from circulating currency, so for the last 60 years there would have been ample stockpiles of old currency silver for the current industrial use. But I reckon they might be running out of this old silver and probably having to rely more on newly mined silver. I have no hard data, so this is just a theory of mine.
In my lifetime as an antique collector i have seen a few times where the price of antique sterling silver ( regardless of how ornate and rare) was being scrapped as it was worth more melted. The late 1980s and late 2000s are two that come to mind. This was driven by the poor resale of antique silver and not its high prices of silver per ounce..
I remember being in Kozminzkys (high end antique jeweller) in melbourne in the late 80s and a guy was buying every bit of antique silver they had and crunching it up so it could fit in a trolly. I was gobsmacked. Interest rates were 18% and no one was spending on unnecessary items.
We are getting to that tipping point again, right now there is still plenty of money about so antique silver is holding its own but any downturn will see the shelves emptied for melting.
 
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