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Price History: 1981 to 1990
(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 the beginning of 1981 the silver market
was starting to adjust after the traumatic events of 1980.
Industrial silver demand was declining, both because of the
worldwide recession that had set in, and in reaction to high
silver prices. Investment demand for silver also fell sharply.
Investors were aware of the reduced fabrication demand for
silver, and of the amount of silver backed up at refineries
Other investors had lost money in 1979-1980, and were wary
of returning to the market. Still others were distracted from
silver by more attractive financial markets.
Supply also fell, as the surge of old scrap
and coin melt subsided. Total supply dropped 101.1 million
ounces from 1980's level to 483.5 million ounces.
The worldwide recession persisted until late
1982, continuing to restrain fabrication demand and discourage
investment absorption. Silver mine production, meanwhile,
had begun to rise, as some mines developed in reaction to
the higher prices since 1979 came onstream. Much mine output
of silver remained profitable even as silver prices subsided
to around $8.00 in the early 1980s, so that expanding existing
operations and developing new mines remained an attractive
proposition for many miners. Secondary recovery of silver,
meanwhile, continued to decline.
Silver prices reached a cyclical nadir of
$4.98 in June 1982, 10% of the $48 peak just 30 months earlier.
June 1982 also proved to be the trough of the recession in
the United States. During 1982 serious problems erupted in
the international debt market, in particular relating to the
debt repayment problems of certain countries in Eastern Europe
and Latin America.
In late 1982 investor interest in silver
was rekindled by several forces, all of which emerged at roughly
the same time. The international financial market panic led
some investors to turn to silver. Others were attracted by
what they saw as unsustainably low prices. Investment demand
also was encouraged by a rapid easing of credit market conditions
by monetary authorities in most industrialized nations; this
easing led to an immediate revival of inflation fears. As
a result of all of these forces coming to bear at once, investment
demand picked up during the second half of 1982 and the first
quarter of 1983. This influx of investor buying helped take
silver prices from the June 1982 low of $4.98 to a peak of
$14.72 in March 1983.
In March 1983, several trends came into play
reversing the rise in silver prices. First, the price had
nearly tripled in nine months. Such a fast ascent led to profit-taking
by investors; it also constricted industrial use. On the supply
side, secondary recovery of silver from scrap and coinage
increased in response to the higher prices. OPEC lowered its
official benchmark oil price, for the first time in the cartel's
history. The sudden decline in petroleum prices quickly reduced
inflation expectations. Silver prices had averaged $13.96
in February 1983. In March they averaged $10.62.
Prices recovered slightly during the summer
months, but from 1983 until 1986 the trend in prices was downward.
This downward trend served an important purpose in the physical
market, in that it discouraged new developments of primary
silver mines, except where high ore grades or other factors
made for extremely efficient plants. It also served to reduce
secondary recovery of silver. On the demand side of the market,
relatively low silver prices removed the incentives to using
less silver or substituting away from silver in products.
Total fabrication demand fell sharply at
the beginning of the 1980s, in response to higher silver prices,
and worldwide recession. Longer term demographic and technological
trends had been pointing to a decline in use, which the price
rise and recession accelerated.
For example, silver use in sterlingware in
the United States actually had peaked in the early 1970s,
and was clearly going through a secular loss of markets due
to changing demographics and consumer tastes. By 1979 U.S.
sterlingware use of silver had fallen 55% from its 1973 peak
of 29.3 million ounces. The decline that followed 1979 was
a continuation of this longer term trend, exacerbated by the
rise in silver prices and the economic recession.
Other industries, including the important
photographic and electronics uses for silver, were able to
reduce their per-unit silver requirements in some instances,
and in other cases to substitute other materials for silver.
As silver prices subsided later in the 1980s, some of these
trends reversed. In the color film photographic market, for
example, competition for higher film speeds led to an increase
in per-unit silver use, to levels higher than those seen in
the late 1970s.
Fabrication demand, including coinage, reached
a low of 363.1 million ounces in 1981, the lowest level since
1960. During the early 1980s, fabrication demand remained
weak, but in 1984 it began rising once more, stimulated by
low silver prices and strong growth in industrial activity.
Silver supply followed a more erratic pattern
during the 1980s, which partly reflected the high degree of
price responsiveness of secondary recovery. Total supply fell
101.1 million ounces from 1980 to 1981. This decline was entirely
a function of the scaling back of secondary recovery, after
the rush of material in late 1979 and 1980. Total supply continued
to slump in 1982, falling to 455.1 million ounces. While this
was happening, in late 1982, silver prices staged a rally
from $4.98 to nearly $15.00. This surge in prices brought
out significant quantities of scrap in 1983, which boosted
total supply to 531.1 million ounces. As prices decreased
from early 1983 into 1986, total supply once more fell back,
to 449.7 million ounces in 1986. Mine production was restricted
by the low prices at this time, with silver reaching a low
for this period of $4.85 in May 1986. Secondary recovery also
was constricted by these low prices. Since 1986 total supply
rose once again, reaching 514.0 million ounces in 1990.
Since 1979 there was a surplus of total silver
supply over fabrication demand every year. On a cumulative
basis, this surplus totaled 927 million ounces from 1979 through
1990.
It appears that most of this surplus was
bought by bona fide investors, individuals who have accumulated
these silver positions in the expectation of being able to
liquidate them at some later date at a profit. Minor surpluses
and deficits can be accounted for by changes in reported market
inventories and investor coin purchases. Most of the silver
coins produced in this decade were bullion coins, designed
for investors and collectors and not intended by their mints
for use as circulating currencies. Silver coinage since 1979
totaled 241.6 million ounces.
Accounting for these factors, it still seems
that investors acquired around a billion ounces of silver
since the late 1970s, one quarter of this in coins. The period
of heaviest silver purchases occurred in 1980 and 1981. Simple
logic bears this out: Strong investment demand was keeping
prices high at this time. As investor buying waned later in
the decade, prices slipped down. The weighted average acquisition
cost of the silver added to investor inventories during this
past past decade was $11.25 per ounce.
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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