Last week(ish*) in silver:
SGE silver vault - ???*
SFE silver vault - loses 13.2 metric tons*
SLV London vault - loses 134.1 metric tons
PSLV silver vault - adds 0.01 metric tons
COMEX silver stock - adds 272.1 metric tons
LBMA silver stock - ??? (no daily or weekly data because LBMA is run by dinosaurs)
Global net change (less LBMA):
Sep 8-12 = +124.81 metric tons
Sep 1-5 = +2.45 metric tons
Aug 25-29 = +409.75 metric tons
Aug 18-22 = +230.8 metric tons
...
* SFE data is from Mon-Wed. I'm missing data for Thu & Fri (as well as SGE data for last week) as @oriental_ghost is on a vacation and has not posted the updates.
Last week net inflows to the COMEX escalated quickly with the Asahi vault leading the way averaging ~37 metric tons per day. Asahi operates a COMEX approved refinery that processes/refines scrap silver and anecdotal reports (which I know I saw/read, but can't seem to find at the moment to cite with a footnote) indicate that refineries are so backed up with scrap stock that they have stopped buying it from the wholesale/dealer market (leading some dealers to offer 90% silver under spot).
SLV shed massive inventory on Monday and Tuesday and it appears that they ran out of shares to lease and the outflow slowed Wednesday and stopped completely on Thursday (some additional outflow occurred on Friday). PSLV had a very quiet week with what I assume is just an accounting adjustment on Monday as 353 troy ounces is less than one LGD silver bar.
Without considering the LBMA and missing China data, global free float of vaulted silver would appear to have grown last week as the COMEX added a large amount and SLV shed inventory (into the LBMA black box). Growth in free float, if that's really what happened, it would only deepen the silver magical metal mystery.
However, there are reasons to consider that COMEX vault stock may not be as free you might think. First, consider David Jensen's post this week suggesting that a good portion of the supposed free float in COMEX vaults is not actually liquid. Then consider the anomalies of actors buying contracts and immediately standing for delivery during the delivery period. These contracts do not appear to be resulting in silver actually leaving the COMEX vaults however.
SLV inventory shed last week was accompanied by a blow out in lease rates and diminishing shares available for borrowing/leasing. It sure looks like SLV was being raided for physical silver. I explored that during the week with a post suggesting that SLV is the canary in the silver mine.
Silver EFP spread appears holding in a range between ~$0.40 and ~$0.60. I do not believe the current elevation is related to tariff concerns as explained previously, so this something worth keeping an eye on as it affects the COMEX-LBMA paper trade (and could contribute to draining of LBMA vault stock and a potential squeeze of the paper markets).
One can only imagine what chaos might be unfolding in the LBMA's London vault system right now. We can only imagine because the dinosaurs at the LBMA do not provide daily/weekly reporting of their vault stock like every other market and major fund in the world.
SLV canary
SLV accounting FUBAR:
COMEX delivery:
Jensen on liquid free float:
More COMEX delivery shenanigans:
Silver magical metal mystery explored:
https://x.com/pmbug/status/1963957482176266495
Silver likely exempt from tariffs:
https://x.com/pmbug/status/1964666605482242122