Gold & Silver Quietly Gather Strength as Other Assets Gyrate

Do Elon Musk’s Antics, New Government Crackdowns Signal a Major Top for Cryptos?


Mike Gleason Mike Gleason
Interview with: Mike Gleason
May 21st, 2021 Comments

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Welcome to this week’s Market Wrap Podcast, I’m Mike Gleason.

This week gold and silver markets built on their recent breakout advances.

Gold prices are up 1.6% since last Friday’s close to come in at $1,881 an ounce as of this Friday recording. Near-term, traders will be eyeing $1,900, then $1,950 as potential resistance levels. Once cleared, the gold market should be set to challenge its all-time high from last summer at $2,075 an ounce.

Turning to silver, prices rallied strongly early in the week before giving back some of those gains. The poor man’s gold currently shows a slight weekly advance of 0.3% to bring spot price to $27.58 an ounce.

The platinum group metals, meanwhile, are lagging. Platinum prices are down 4.7% this week to trade at $1,189. And palladium is now registering a weekly loss of 3.9% to trade at $2,812 per ounce.

Metals markets traded relatively quiet this week compared to cryptocurrency markets. Massive price gyrations hit Bitcoin, Dogecoin, Ethereum, and other cryptos.

Fears of a crackdown in China, combined with remarks by Elon Musk announcing Tesla will no longer accept Bitcoin, seemed to trigger the volatility. A selling spree caused Bitcoin to suffer a 25% mini-crash this week before prices turned back up sharply.

This isn’t the type of price action that inspires confidence in an alternative currency as stable store of value. But from the very beginning, cryptocurrencies have served mainly as vehicles for speculators. And their volatile nature has manifested mostly on the upside – at least up to now.

No one knows whether higher highs lie ahead or whether the goofiness surrounding Dogecoin and Elon Musk’s antics signals a major top for the asset class.

What does seem certain is that crypto markets will remain both volatile and speculative. That means they may never offer the long-term stability and reliability characteristics of gold.

The monetary metal probably won’t ever be the highest-flying alternative asset. For some performance chasers, gold is too boring. But for many other investors, gold represents an essential anchor in their portfolio.

Digital assets can implode into the ether. The value of U.S. dollars and dollar-denominated IOUs can be inflated into oblivion. But physical precious metals can be counted on to retain value over time, come what may.

Hard assets investors who seek more upside potential than gold, and who can also stomach greater volatility, should consider allocating more of their wealth to silver and perhaps platinum group metals as well.

The gold-to-silver ratio has been trending strongly in favor of silver since last March, when silver got historically cheap versus gold. While silver is no longer dirt cheap, it is nowhere near expensive. At under $30 an ounce, it still offers compelling relative value versus just about any other asset – hard or soft.

A strong case can also be made for platinum being undervalued versus gold and most other assets out there. However, its demand profile is highly concentrated in the automotive industry. Investment and jewelry demand for platinum are both relatively small and fuel cell technology that uses platinum is early stage.

There is much better potential for large-scale public buying of silver bullion to strain physical supply and drive prices higher. A silver squeeze on the futures exchange could result in an epic price spike with the potential to send the metal to triple digits.

In the meantime, the ongoing debasement of the U.S. dollar by politicians and central bankers will continue to exert gradual upside pressure on all hard assets.

On Wednesday, the Federal Reserve released the minutes from its most recent policy meeting. Fed officials downplayed the recent surge in price inflation as temporary. That remains to be seen.

The Consumer Price Index, Producer Price Index, and other inflation gauges have been running hotter than Jerome Powell and his cohorts expected. So, their expectations that inflation will soon come down should be viewed with skepticism.

The Fed hinted at its last meeting that it’s preparing to eventually taper its $120 billion in monthly bond purchases. An interest-rate hike seemed unthinkable at the beginning of the year, but now central bankers are at least thinking about thinking about hiking at some point – perhaps in 2022.

A lot can happen between now and then. With rates still ultra-low and stimulus still being pumped into financial markets and the pockets of the unemployed, asset bubbles are prone to form.

The next manic move higher could be in stocks, real estate, cryptocurrencies, precious metals, or all of the above. But investors should ask themselves which asset classes represent real value at current prices and which have already been driven to extreme overvaluation by the Fed’s money printer.

Precious metals naysayers can try to make the case that there won’t be a gold and silver mania ahead. But they can’t deny that the metals offer better value than a lot of other asset classes that recently got bid up to stupendous heights in herd-driven trading frenzies.

Well, that will do it for this week. Be sure to check back next Friday for our next Weekly Market Wrap Podcast. Until then this has been Mike Gleason with Money Metals Exchange, thanks for listening and have a great weekend everybody.

About the Author

Mike Gleason

Mike Gleason

Mike Gleason is a Director with Money Metals Exchange, a precious metals dealer recently named "Best in the USA" by an independent global ratings group. Gleason is a hard money advocate and a strong proponent of personal liberty, limited government and the Austrian School of Economics. A graduate of the University of Florida, Gleason has extensive experience in management, sales and logistics as well as precious metals investing. He also puts his longtime broadcasting background to good use, hosting a weekly precious metals podcast since 2011, a program listened to by tens of thousands each week.