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Price History: 1979 to 1980
(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

By 1979, investors and other market participants
had come to the strong conviction that the silver market was
facing a severe shortage of metal, and that prices were likely
to rise sharply at some point. The market had been living
off of investor selling for seven years. Prices had risen
from the beginning of the decade, but there were serious questions
as to how much longer investors would be willing and able
to continue supplying silver to fabricators, at least at the
prices seen in the mid-1970s.
World economic and political events also
were coming to bear on the silver market, most notably in
the form of a major cyclical upward surge in inflation throughout
the industrialized world. Sensing that silver prices should
be adjusting upward to compensate for these inflationary trends,
many investors decided that silver prices between $4.00 and
$5.50, which had prevailed during most of the late 1970s,
were too low. Investors ceased selling their old silver holdings,
and instead began adding to their holdings. This added further
upward pressure to the price of silver. Simplistic retrospectives
of the silver market in late 1979 tend to focus on the high-profile
purchases of large amounts of silver and silver futures by
various wealthy individuals; in reality, there was a tremendously
broad-based rush to buy silver by investors worldwide at the
time.
By the final quarter of 1979, silver prices
had risen to levels between $15.00 and $25.00 per ounce. At
these levels several physical market forces combined to act
against higher prices. Additionally, the two major U.S. futures
exchanges that traded silver at the time took steps to force
those with margined long positions to liquidate their positions.
As silver prices rose above $15.00 in September
1979, fabrication demand began to be affected. On an annual
average basis, industrial silver use fell a relatively mild
0.9 percent to 445.1 million ounces in 1979. Demand had held
up reasonably well during the first three quarters of the
year. However, a sharp cut-back in demand in the fourth quarter
led to overall annual decreases in silver use. By some estimates,
industrial use of silver was 40 percent lower in the last
quarter of 1979 than it had been in the first quarter of that
year.
When silver prices rose sharply in 1973-1974,
manufacturers began searching for ways to reduce their need
to use silver. Several substitutes for silver and methods
to reduce per-unit silver use were developed, but they were
too expensive to implement as long as silver was around $5.00
per ounce. When silver rose to $15.00 and more however, fabricators
were able to introduce these measures rapidly. Demand also
quickly declined for jewelry and sterlingware.
Investors began to sell large amounts of
silver especially old coins from the 1960s. Other sold large
amounts of sterlingware and jewelry for its silver content.
A host of political events, including the
continuous U.S. hostage crisis in Iran and the Soviet invasion
of Afghanistan, motivated investment demand, helping keep
silver prices high and volatile through 1980. High inflation,
high nominal interest rates, and negative real interest rates
further stimulated investor interest in silver and other tangible
assets. Prices dropped as low as $10.80 in March, but rose
back to $25.00 in September, as the Iran-Iraq war erupted.
By the end of 1980 silver prices had subsided once more to
around $16.00.
These high silver prices meanwhile were having
a dramatic effect on the physical silver market conditions.
Total supply rose form 434.8 million ounces in 1978 to 505.0
million ounces in 1979, and then to 584.6 million ounces in
1980. The bulk of this increase occurred in secondary recovery.
Total secondary recycling of silver doubled, from 152.0 million
ounces in 1978 to 302.0 million ounces in 1980. The recovery
of silver from old coins, those holdings taken in by investors
during the 1960s, increased from 21 million ounces in 1978
to 45 million ounces the next year, and then to 94 million
ounces in 1980. Refiners faced substantial backlogs, sometimes
of 6-12 months in processing these materials.
Mine production remained almost unchanged
during this time, and actually was lower in 1980, at 264.6
million ounces, than it had been in 1978. (A U.S. copper industry
strike, along with a strike at a major U.S. silver mine, were
major factors behind the low output.) Mine developments have
long lead times, and the increases in output that came about
in response to the 1979-1980 jump in silver prices did not
appear until the mid-1980s.
Prices also were having a dramatic effect
on fabrication demand, compounded in 1980 by the onset of
the deepest post-war recession. Industrial silver use fell
from 449.1 million ounces in 1978 to 362.5 million ounces
in 1980, a level fully 25 percent below the 1976 cyclical
peak of 481.0 million ounces. The last countries using silver
in circulating coinage, Austria, France and West Germany,
withdrew from that activity, reducing silver use in coinage
on a worldwide basis from 39.5 million ounces in 1978 to 15.0
million ounces in 1980.
The combination of higher secondary recovery
and lower fabrication demand brought an abrupt end to the
eight years of silver market supply deficits. In 1978 new
supply had fallen 53.8 million ounces short of fabrication
requirements. In 1979 there was a 28.9 million ounce surplus.
In 1980 this surplus reached 207.1 million
ounces, nearly as high as the 228.9 million ounce surplus
that had resulted from the 1968 run-up in silver prices and
the Treasurys sales programs. The increase in the recovery
of silver from old coins accounted for nearly half of the
surplus.
1950
to 1960 | 1960 to 1965 | 1966
to 1970 | 1971 to 1978 | 1979
to 1980 | 1981 to 1990 | 1990
to 1999 |
2000 to Present
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