Silver prices jump to eight-year highs as Reddit traders' pile in

Reddit traders send silver price to eight-year highs: Precious metal soars 12% as renegade investors pile in to put squeeze on short-sellers

  • Reddit thread r/wallstreetbets had mentions of the hashtag #silversqueeze 
  • Spot silver up as much as 12% to $30.17 an ounce – the highest since early 2013 
  • Shares in precious metal miner Fresnillo almost 20% higher 

Silver prices jumped to eight-year highs this morning after the Reddit brigade of traders that targeted Gamestop turned their attention to the precious metal.

The Reddit thread r/wallstreetbets had multiple mentions of the hashtag #silversqueeze, where users encouraged each other to buy silver, sending the metal price soaring.  

Spot silver has risen as much as 12 per cent to $30.17 an ounce, an increase of almost 20 per cent over the last five days and the highest price since February 2013.   

Silver lining? The precious metal price has jumped after being targeted by Reddit traders

Silver lining? The precious metal price has jumped after being targeted by Reddit traders

The frenzied activity in the precious metal is the latest of an online movement by retail traders to push up values of assets that big fund managers had bet against.    

‘You can understand why silver is attracting the attentions of the social media traders who are looking to vent their fury upon, and profit from, short sellers,’ says Russ Mould at AJ Bell.

‘Allegations about, and fines for, investment banks rigging precious metal markets have abounded for some time. 

‘More fundamentally, money supply is surging, markets more generally are watching carefully for any signs of inflation and precious metals are traditionally seen as a potential hedge here.’ 

Traders piled in silver by buying shares in silver mining companies as well as exchange-traded funds (ETFs) backed by physical silver bars, in a GameStop-style short-squeeze.

Shares in Fresnillo – a precious metal mining FTSE 100 company – were up over 18 per cent to £11.69 in morning trading on Monday. 

Meanwhile, data from iShares Silver Trust ETF on Friday showed over 37million shares were created in one day, each one representing an ounce of silver.

Buying an ETF can boost silver prices by increasing the number of shares in the fund and making its operator buy more metal to back them.

On the up: The price of silver has soared around 20% since Thursday

On the up: The price of silver has soared around 20% since Thursday

Is #silversqueeze actually a Trojan horse counter-attack from the hedge funds?

Some Reddit users in the forums threads r/wallstreetbets and r/Wallstreetsilver have argued that precious metals prices have been kept artificially low – and that a surge in the price of silver could hurt large financial companies. 

‘Think about the Gainz. If you don’t care about the gains, think about the banks like JP Morgan you’d be destroying along the way,’ said Reddit user RocketBoomGo in a widely circulated post. 

However, some other users are arguing that the #silversqueeze is a ‘hedge-fund coordinated attack’ to distract them from the Gamestop fight.  

The post on the forum warns: ‘By buying silver/going long on silver, you would be directly putting money into the pockets of the EXACT HEDGE FUNDS ON THE OTHER SIDE OF $GME The hedge funds are LONG silver NOT short silver.

‘The media, Wall Street, normies, and every other non-WSB autist are trying to push you to buy silver. This would be a tragic, irreversible decision that not only will most likely not make you any money because the squeeze is fake, it will put you on the sidelines from this righteous and glorious war we are in.

‘If you are looking for alternative investments to GME, I’d recommend simply getting in on the $BANG GANG- Blackberry, AMC, Nokia, and GME.’

A US bullion broker, Apmex, said it was forced to stop sales of silver over the weekend after a ‘dramatic shift’ in demand in recent days.

‘For example, the ratio of ounces sold per day was running about two times earlier in the week and closer to four times the average demand by the end of the week, said Ken Lewis, the chief executive of Apmex. 

But analysts have warned that it may prove much harder for small investors to squeeze short sellers as the silver market is deeper than that for smaller stocks like Gamestop.

Neil Wilson at Markets.com said: ‘Despite appearances this morning it’s going to a lot harder to squeeze silver shorts as the market is so much deeper and more liquid.

‘We should also note that some bigger smart money may have be front-running this trade to piggyback the rally and further fuelling the move up. (George Soros: “When I see a bubble forming, I rush in to buy, adding fuel to the fire.”)’

He added: ‘Targeting physically backed ETFs like SLV may be smart, as it will drive physical demand and push up spot prices perhaps more acutely than just by trading futures. I would reiterate that this kind of herding to coordinate a squeeze up is risky and likely to create a bubble that will hurt more than helps on the way down.’  

Freetrade senior analyst Dan Lane said that while the mass movement into silver might be the internet’s latest revolt against the financial elites, it chimes with more widespread renewed interest in precious metals.

‘There is now a significant global interest in shorting silver at the moment and banks hold a lot of that,’ he said.

‘But, stocks and commodities weren’t born equal – we don’t know whether the shorts have other hedges in place, in the physical metal as opposed to an ETF.’

Beware what happened to the Hunt Brothers in 1980…

Parallels have been drawn with what happened in the 1980s when the Hunt brothers tried to corner the silver market. 

The oil barons – Nelson Bunker, Lamar and William Herbert – tried to buy up as much silver as they could in 1980 in an attempt to protect their wealth from inflation.

They seemingly managed to control a third of the freely available supply, excluding that which resided in government or central bank vaults.

However, industrial buyers of silver complained about the increase in their raw material costs and regulators stepped in to limit how much silver could be bought on margin or using borrowed cash.

The move sent the price of silver plunging and the rich Hunt brothers eventually saw their business empire collapse under the weight of its losses on silver.  

 

source: dailymail.co.uk