Silver Presents the Magical Metal Mystery

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By all accounts, silver has been in a structural deficit, with global demand exceeding global production, for over four years now:
The Silver Institute said:
Silver saw its fourth year of a major deficit in 2024 as a slight 2% rise in supply and 3% dip in demand still meant a shortfall of around 150Moz (4,600t).

Above ground supply has made up the difference with inventory draining from major vaults in the COMEX and LBMA systems since early 2020.

COMEX silver vault inventory:
silverstock.webp


LBMA silver vault inventory:
lbmasilver.webp



Tariffs, EFP Spreads and Monkey Wrenches​


In late November, 2024, President Trump announced 25% blanket tariffs were to be imposed on goods from Canada and Mexico, and 10% (additional) on goods from China. There was no clarification on whether precious metals (or anything else) would be exempt from the tariffs. Additionally, President Trump signalled that further tariffs were likely for Europe and other corners of the globe.

The "EFP spread" - the difference between COMEX futures price and London spot, which had been near zero or negative, began to rise. As it rose, COMEX swap dealers (bullion banks) that were net short and hedging with London/LBMA silver began to take delivery of the metal and have it shipped to COMEX warehouses.

Throughout December, January and early February, COMEX shorts went on a tear importing silver from London/LBMA and anywhere else they could find eligible silver bars (COMEX only accepts silver in very specific formats):I touched on these issues previously in my Silver Squeeze Comprehensive Thesis, but I reiterate the points to provide context for what follows.


Opacity - 100%​


CME group publishes a silver stock report every working day that discloses the inventory changes amongst all of the member vaults in the COMEX system (for the previous working day). From this data we can see that COMEX vaults were seeing inflows of silver, on average, about 4M troy ounces (about 124 metric tons) per day.

Unfortunately, the LBMA is not so transparent with their reporting. They publish a single, total inventory number once a month. They have also been caught misreporting their vault inventory before (to the tune of 3,000 tons - not a small error!).

April Fool's joke:


In February and March, the LBMA reported inventories reflecting decreasing outflows of silver while the COMEX continued to report strong and consistent daily inflows.


The 2,000 Metric Ton Mystery​


Per the Silver Institute's numbers (widely regarded to understate global demand), the average global silver production (including recycling) across 2024 was ~84.6mtoz per month while the demand was ~97mtoz per month. They further estimate that the production/demand deficit will increase in 2025. Global vaults should be draining and the draining should intensify in 2025.

However, the vaulted inventory of the COMEX, LBMA and SFE/SGE (China) supposedly managed to add 64.7mtoz (over 2,000 metric tons) of Good Delivery format silver bars to their vaults across February and March per their inventory reports. It's not like refineries/mints suddenly developed the ability to triple their production of COMEX standard silver bars, so where did the new COMEX silver come from in February and March? I think someone is lying about their vaulted inventory and I'm looking at you LBMA.
 
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pmbug said:
SLV adding metal in the last week (in London) and COMEX adding metal in the last few days. SGE also added a large amount of silver per the latest report (before May 1 holiday). Physical silver appears to be flying into all the vaults at the same time. I wonder where it is coming from ...

 
I have crunched April numbers:
...
If these reports are to be believed, over the last three months, the amount of silver stored in global exchange vaults (LBMA + COMEX + SFE/SGE) has increased 90.667 mtoz ( 2,820 metric tons) all while silver is in a structural deficit with global demand exceeding global production. It does not make sense and I suspect that someone (looking at you LBMA) is lying.
...

 
I am the Krugerrand goo goo gajoo
 
Via Google translate:
Let me tell you the truth. China produces 3,800 tons of silver per year from mines, and recycles 1,400 tons of electrolytic silver. This is data from ten years ago. In the past eight years, China's imports of silver concentrate from South America and other countries have exceeded 1.7 million tons! Henan Juyuan and Hubei Chenzhou are the two largest refined silver bases. According to 2024 data, Juyuan will produce 5,000 tons of silver per year and Chenzhou will produce 6,000 tons per year. China's photovoltaic silver consumption has exceeded 10,000 tons.



Global production of silver in 2023 was around 26,000 tons per Grok. Ghost is claiming that China is processing roughly 40% of global production all by themselves. I wonder what % of global production was acquired by India. Makes you wonder how the COMEX + LBMA could find so many tons of Good Delivery format silver bars in February and March.
 
Nick Laird has made all the charts on his site available for free for the last week or so and I grabbed a screenshot of his UK silver import/export chart this morning:

uksilverimportexport.png



The chart provides some color to the mystery. If we compare the reports of LBMA silver vault stock (total stock including ETF stock held by LBMA) to Nick's import/export numbers (estimated from his chart) we see (all values in metric tons):

Month
LBMA stock​
UK import/export​
COMEX stock​
December
-719​
-100​
497​
January
-2,211​
-2,000​
1,144​
February
-1,066​
-1,500​
1,894​
March
-335​
-500​
1,809​
April
732​
450​
674​
May
508​
490​
-147​
June
424​
550​
133​

It looks like there is a small lag from the time that silver exits the LBMA system to when it got exported. From Dec-Mar, the total LBMA silver stock drain was 4,331 metric tons. Across the same period, the UK exported about 4,100 metric tons. From April-June, the total LBMA silver stock gain was 1,664 metric tons. Across the same period, the UK imported about 1,490 metric tons. The net difference across Dec-June is 2,667 metric tons (LBMA) drained versus 2,610 metric tons exported. These numbers are very much aligned.

Meanwhile, COMEX silver stock increases 6,004 metric tons across the same period (Dec-June). The net difference between COMEX and LBMA inflows/outflows month by month are:

Month​
LBMA+COMEX inflow/outflow​
December
-222​
January
-1,067​
February
828​
March
1,474​
April
1,406​
May
361​
June
557​

From Dec-Jan, there was a net drain on COMEX+LBMA of 1,289 metric tons of silver. From Feb-Apr, COMEX+LBMA reportedly added a net total of 3,708 metric tons (or an average of 1,236 per month). That slowed down across May and June.

The question remains - where did all the excess silver, in London Good Delivery format mind you, come from after February? Is silver truly in a structural deficit with global demand > global supply? If so, how do the COMEX + LBMA find such a surplus of LGD silver since February?
 
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