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Price History: 1960 to 1965
(yearly average prices based on London PM Fix)
1950
to 1960 | 1960 to 1965 | 1966 to
1970 | 1971 to 1978 | 1979
to 1980 | 1981 to 1990 | 1990
to 1999 |
2000 to Present
For decades, the Treasury had been a net
buyer of silver. By 1960, it had become a net seller. In 1960,
the Treasury sold 22 million ounces of silver in bullion form,
and used another 46 million ounces in coinage. The next year
the Treasury had to sell 63 million ounces of bullion and
use another 56 million ounces to replace silver coins that
had been taken out of circulation by investors. That year,
1961, the Treasury realized that it would run out of silver
for use in coinage and as a reserve against silver certificates
unless it took drastic measures to begin phasing silver out
of currency. In 1961, the Treasury ordered $5 and $10 silver
certificates out of circulation, freeing silver reserves held
against these bills and reducing the publics call on
Treasury silver. In November 1961 the government also suspended
silver bullion sales by the Treasury at the formerly fixed
price of 91 cents.
Once the Treasury stopped selling at that
price, market quotes for silver quickly rose. In June 1963
the Treasury also replaced the $1 silver certificate with
Federal Reserve notes. By 1963, silver prices reached $1.29,
the monetary value of silver in coinage. At prices above this
level, holders of silver certificates would have been able
to redeem them for more valuable silver, under the now-defunct
silver certificate legislation. (The other trigger price the
Treasury worried about was $1.38, at which level it was profitable
to recycle coinage for its silver content.)
During this transition period, the U.S. Treasury
still had to keep the silver market well supplied, in order
to keep the silver market relatively calm until it had completed
the withdrawal of silver form its currency. In late 1963 the
Treasury resumed its silver bullion sales, as part of this
effort. Over the six years between 1960 and 1965, the Treasury
sold a total of 342 million ounces of silver bullion. It used
another 814 million ounces of silver in coinage during this
same time. In total, the Treasury used 1,156,000,000 ounces
of its silver reserves. Much of this silver, especially the
bulk of it used in coins, found its way quickly into the hands
of investors. Government steps to remove silver from the currency
led investors to conclude that the price of silver would rise
sharply once the Treasury no longer was supplying the market
with such large volumes of the metal.
Fabrication demand continued to rise sharply.
Industrial use, excluding coinage, rose at a 9 percent per
annum pace, from 212.9 million ounces in 1959 to 355.8 million
ounces in 1965. Including coinage, which grew rapidly during
this same time due to the investor run on coins, total fabrication
demand rose 16% per annum. Mine production, in contrast rose
only 1.9% per year from 195.6 million ounces in 1959 to 218.4
million ounces in 1965.
Secondary recovery of silver was starting
to expand, in part spurred by the realization that with the
passing of Treasury silver sales and coinage programs the
market would need to recover increasing amounts of silver
from scrapped items. It was clear to market participants that
silver prices had been restrained by the Treasurys willingness
to fill the gap between market supplies and industrial demand,
and that once the Treasurys silver was gone, additional
supplies would have to be found elsewhere. Coin melt rose
from 10 million ounces in 1960 to 30 million ounces in 1965.
Silver recycling from other items rose from 40 million ounces
in 1960 to 57 million ounces in 1965.
1950
to 1960 | 1960 to 1965 | 1966 to
1970 | 1971 to 1978 | 1979
to 1980 | 1981 to 1990 | 1990
to 1999 |
2000 to Present
For silver price background information and monthly silver price data tables, please click here.
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