Jason Hommel
For a long time, people have been asking me, “When will silver run out?”. They know that the world uses up more silver each year (about 850 million ounces) than the world mines (about 600 million ounces), and that existing demand can only be met by selling existing inventory (such as recycling 200 million ounces, or goverments selling 50 million ounces), so it’s a natural question to ask. The question is not implying that mankind will be unable to mine any more. Rumor is that there remains at least about 14-16 years of silver in the ground at “current” prices; while at much higher prices, silver mining becomes more economic, and more deposits can be added to that “in ground” reserve number.
So, the question is really just asking, “When will we run out of “excess” above ground silver that can meet the supply/demand gap, so that the price will begin to really take off upwards?” Clearly, the world has silver in supplies above ground, and such silver supplies are dwindling in order to meet the supply/demand gap. About two years ago, the world started adding to above ground silver supplies as silver investors started buying, (and the silver surveys label investor buying as a “surplus”. However, silver recycling was still greater than new stockpiling, which continued to deplete overall silver supplies.
Such a question as “When will silver run out?” cannot really be answered in advance, since nobody really knows how much silver there is, and who owns it, and at what price they are willing to sell it. Again, that brings us back to the nature of silver; it’s inherently private wealth, held anonymously. Estimates on “above ground” silver, in refined, deliverable form have ranged from 300 million ounces to 1 billion ounces, to about a high of 4 billion ounces if you include jewelry and flatware, up to 20 billion ounces if you include all forms of silver that have not ended up in landfills, out of the total of 43 billion ounces of silver estimated to have been mined in all of human history. Furthermore, nobody is arguing that the last bit of silver that exists needs to be consumed before the price rises substantially. The question is really about when will all the unwanted silver, in so-called “weak” hands of holders who don’t really want it, be sold, to allow the price to rise to meet the majority of the expectations of the remaining wise investors who have planned in advance to actually store up some of the rare stuff.
But finally, I think the answer has arrived. The answer is “NOW!” Silver has run out, now! Or, in other words, most of the cheap silver has run out. More
Also See: Gold coins sold out in North America