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Price History: 1990 to 1999
(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

Throughout the 1990's, the main question
for the silver market was the rate at which above-ground
stocks of bullion and coins were being consumed by the widening
gap between fabrication demand and conventional supply, and
when this erosion of stocks might begin to significantly impact
the price of the metal. Mine production of new silver rose by only 4 percent from 1990 to 1999, while total fabrication
demand increased by 22 percent during the same period.
While the fundamentals for silver strengthened
during the past decade, the price of silver slowly climbed
from an average price of $4.83 in 1990 to an average price
of $5.22 in 1999.
In 1999, silver's price performance was subdued
following an eventful 1998, and was off 5.8 percent from the
previous year, but it did finish the year up 6.7 percent from
its starting level (ending the year at $5.33 having begun
it at $4.99). It traded in a narrow range between $4.88 and
$5.79.
Substantial flows of silver out of China
helped to keep the price in check in 1999, and had similar
impacts in the early 2000s.
The gold/silver ratio (the number of ounces
of silver it takes to buy one ounce of gold) is another market
indicator some analysts watch. This ratio has at times been
a closely followed indicator of the relative trends in the
two markets and in the past has been used by investors as
signals for buying, selling, or exchanging gold and silver.
The ratio for 1999 was 53.37, versus 53.08 in 1998. The average
for the period 1968-1999 is 50.18
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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