die Suche im Internet
http://www.google.com ETF silver inventory
https://smaulgld.com/silver-supply-demand/
Silver Supply and Demand Surplus/Deficit 1975-2012 – The CPM Group
Silver mining production has kept up with demand even as the price of silver has fallen, putting financial strain on silver producers.
surplus/deficit = 0
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Silver Supply and Demand Surplus/Deficit 1994-2013 – The Silver Institute
Demand for silver continues to grow driven by silver coin and bar sales and new industrial uses.
surplus/deficit = -100
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What’s Next For Silver?
An Entire Year’s Global Silver Production is Worth Just $14 Billion
The silver market is so small that one extremely wealthy person could buy an entire years’ global mining production worth of silver. In 2013, the total silver mined world wide was 819 million ounces. At a price of $17.50 an ounce that is only approximately $14.3 billion!
In a such small market anything can happen quickly.
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http://blog.milesfranklin.com/…n-of-silver-left-thats-it
Then, of course, we have the SLV ETF administered by none other than the world’s largest paper silver short, JP Morgan. Its inventory has never been – and never will be – audited, but we’re to believe it somehow amassed 350 million ounces of silver, nearly 20% of the aforementioned incredibly illiquid global supply in just eight years’ time. And better yet, in doing so, the price only increased from $11/oz. to $17/oz., when the cost of production is closer to $25/oz.? Yeah, if you say so.
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http://www.nasdaq.com/article/…demand-seriously-cm411487
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ETFs
GFMS reports, on average, 5% more ETF inventory build than does CPM. As said, Eric Sprott showed that the real silver holdings by ETFs at the end of 2009 exceeded the number reported by GFMS by at least 43%. But the most important objection we have to the CPM analysis is the way they process the ETF demand and the way they link this to inventory. CPM adds this year's ETF demand to inventory for the next year, implying it is a silver stock available for purchase, and giving the impression that there is a large build-up of inventory we can fall back on. Nothing to worry about regarding supply of the metal.
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our analysis shows that the silver market may be in imminent danger of supply disruption. Just recently, a Chinese supplier company announced it has reached an agreement with Santa Cruz Silver, a miner in Mexico, for the purchase of $28.4 million of silver from its mines. This is not a hedging deal. Barring a small discount for making funds available upfront, the Chinese have not made any pricing arrangements, and silver is to be purchased at spot. The sole purpose of the deal from a Chinese perspective is to lock in guaranteed supplies of silver, something one only does if they believe shortages are imminent.
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