Pirocco said:
It's now 22/08/2015. 2 months later. So far we indeed didn't see $13.
The lowest (in a weekly reported day snapshot!) position was here:
...
Assuming again a bottom position of 10000, and a 70 Moz supply/demand change per price dollar, the next bottom price is projected as $13.41.
Added older similar/close bottom price projections:
18/08/2015 25437 $15.23 > $13.41
02/06/2015 57569 $16.70 > $13.30
19/05/2015 62485 $17.40 > $13.71
14/04/2015 41980 $16.08 > $13.8
31/03/2015 49861 $16.60 > $13.75
10/02/2015 53457 $16.80 > $13.7
Conclusion: there is a $13.6 mean is now holding 6 months.
.
We're now another 2.5 months later.
Update on the
bold.
(date) (total net position on the Comex for silver) (London Fix that day) (price associated to a 10000 position bottom)
03/11/2015 67141 $15.38 > $11.30
27/10/2015 69373 $15.80 > $11.56
20/10/2015 66800 $15.86 > $11.80
13/10/2015 58626 $15.61 > $12.14
06/10/2015 49502 $15.67 > $12.85
29/09/2015 30106 $14.56 > $13.12
22/09/2015 31314 $14.94 > $13.42
15/09/2015 22255 $14.35 > $13.475
08/09/2015 25560 $14.63 > $13.52
01/09/2015 24566 $14.68 > $13.64
25/08/2015 23970 $14.87 > $13.87
That $13.6 mean ceased holding.
During october 2015, it dropped to $11.30 now.
The forward / future component in the spot price now sits on the level of decade-high.
Without their long/short positions / contracts that nearly never get delivered in metal - nearly always in dollars, the silver price would now be $10.58.
What does make them dumping positions: more sales back from speculators - then they quickly dump their futures positions as to inflict the speculators less dollars.
What does make them taking positions: more purchases from speculators - then they quickly take futures positions as to inflict the speculators less ounces.
If speculative demand stays what it is, then they just can hold their futures contracts and thus keep the price on the corresponding higher level and for a same amount ounces reap more dollars from speculators. This is what they could during the bull market period (see surface between green trendline and X axis). Changed in 2011, where that series of major fluctuations started.
For the rest, it just depends on all of us speculators. For ex, I didn't buy a single ounce so far this year. I'm part of the reason for the drop of the price. Apparently I'm not alone haha. What I do notice is that alot dealers now offer buy back on their sites. In 2011-2012 nearly none did. One did, but not guaranteed (ie he left himself the option to refuse, which pretty comes down to the same as not buying back since speculators prefer to sell higher).
This is the long term evolution of the futures market - hedge:
http://finviz.com/futures_charts.ashx?t=SI&p=m1
(green, or sum of blue+red, trendlines there below the price chart)
About a couple major silver stockpiles:
- IShares Silver Trust: 2015/11/04 313,681,057.20 (314 Moz)
- Comex depositories: 2015/11/05 161.812.610.040 (162 Moz)
I don't know if there is an overlap (ie Comex depository figure holding (part of) IShares Silver Trust stock). Historical data indicates a "no" answer.
To place these figures in a context:
- IShares has hung around 314 Moz in 2012. And 305 Moz in january 2010 (yes, 5 years ago). The peak was in april 2011 at 366 Moz. But has been 350 Moz on 1 december 2014 (less than 1 year ago)
- Comex depositories held 112 Moz on 15 december 2011. Quickly jumped to the 140 Moz level, lasted entire 2012. Then 160 Moz in 2013. Still hangs there, now in 2015.
For informative purposes.