Can Reddit's silver "apes" beat the market?
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[July 09, 2021] By
Peter Hobson
LONDON (Reuters) -Kerry Kraker, 56, has
worked in kitchens all his life. Since March he's spent around $100 a
week - half his spare cash – on silver coins. He's part of a growing
social media movement who say they are buying bars and coins for
protection from a coming age of inflation.
Thanks to a community of like-minded silver 'stackers' gathering on
social-media platform Reddit Inc., Seattle-based Kraker says he also
feels empowered.
"They are so encouraging and so convinced in the changes they can
cause," Kraker, who lost his home in the financial crisis, told Reuters.
Inspired by Reddit forum WallStreetBets, some of the 122,000-strong
community hope to corner the market and bring down what they say is an
unjust banking system.
Market professionals say that is unlikely to succeed - there is plenty
of silver, and central bankers in the United States and Europe expect
inflation to stay in low single-digits.
But bankers aren't getting through to this group.
"There's a bit of anger, like 'fuck the system.' If there's a back door
to wealth, I might take that door because the front door is closed,"
said Kraker. "The bankers and others have basically shut that door for
everyone who is not themselves."
The core of the movement is a Reddit community called Wall Street
Silver, formed in January at the time WallStreetBets was marshalling an
uprising of ordinary people against the financial elites, through
coordinated buying of company shares.
Reuters spoke to more than 20 members, who call themselves "silverbacks"
and "apes," have a home page featuring an image of an army of primates
on the march from the "Planet of the Apes" movie, and say things like
"Ape like shiny." They organise "raids" – days on which everyone buys
together.
The group's founder, Ivan Bayoukhi, is a 24-year old former car salesman
living with his parents in Alberta, Canada. "NOW IS THE TIME TO WAKE UP
AND TAKE THE
POWER BACK IN THE HANDS OF THE PEOPLE," says
https://www.reddit.com/r/
Wallstreetsilver/comments/mlpxev/
now_is_
the_time_to_wake_up_and_take_the_
power one of his characteristic posts.
Silver costs around $26 an ounce. Stackers think the price will rise as
inflation erodes the value of currencies, demand for silver rises, and
supplies run short. Some say that by buying up bars and coins, they can
jack up prices by 100% or even 1,000%, to the point where they can call
the shots against the so-called bullion banks, the large financial
institutions which lead trade in precious metals.
A March post Our time draws nigh...keep stacking and we will win the
day! : Wallstreetsilver pictured silver coins laid out to spell a
message to the head of JPMorgan Chase & Co, a U.S. investment bank which
dominates the bullion trade: "KISS MY ASS JAMIE DIMON." JPMorgan
declined to comment.
"In a year or two we will have millions of people in the movement,"
Bayoukhi told Reuters. "And then it will be over for the bullion banks."
"CORNER THE MARKET"
Prices of silver and gold, which are traditionally seen as safe stores
of wealth, have risen since 2019: Gold is up around 40% and silver
around 70% since then. The silver stackers are joining millions
worldwide who believe currencies are vulnerable – a fear that has grown
as governments borrowed and printed money in the pandemic.
"It scares me every day when this bomb will burst," said Tim Hack, a
23-year-old stacker in Germany. "Silver and gold really have intrinsic
physical value that you can even feel when you hold it in your hand."
Posters on Reddit joined the silver fray on Jan. 27, when posts appeared
on WallStreetBets saying that if enough people bought the metal, they
could push prices to the moon.
"Corner the market," said one.
Adding to the impetus was an argument put forward on Reddit that big
banks trade huge quantities of paper contracts for silver that they
don't have in their possession, keeping prices lower than they should
be.
In some ways, that's correct.
Contracts representing around 800 million ounces of silver are active in
the New York futures market alone - more than twice the amount the
exchange says is in its registered vaults, not all of which is available
for delivery. Much of the silver that banks buy and sell in London,
another big trading hub, is borrowed, bankers and traders say.
If every professional who owns silver on paper called in their dues at
once, there wouldn't be enough metal on hand, they agree. The system
works because most people with contracts don't want actual metal, which
they'd have to pay to store and insure. They are speculators, or miners
and jewellers, hedging their risks.
[to top of second column] |
Kerry Kraker, who is a part of the "Wall Street Silver" Reddit
community and regularly invests in silver with his weekly savings,
displays a 10-ounce silver bar while posing for a portrait at his
home in Seattle, Washington, U.S., June 12, 2021. Picture taken June
12, 2021. REUTERS/Lindsey Wasson
After the posts on WallStreetBets, around $3 billion rushed into a fund run by
asset managers Blackrock that stores silver for investors. Blackrock said it
added more than 100 million (adds dropped word) ounces of silver to its
stockpile in three days. Silver's wholesale price jumped nearly 20%.
Much of the silver stored for Blackrock is in London. The London Bullion Market
Association (LBMA), an industry body, later said that there had been "concerns
that London would run out of silver."
Blackrock told Reuters it did not track where the money had come from.
The Reddit group's founder Bayoukhi said he watched with growing excitement,
turned to his father and said, "Why don't I start a Wall Street silver
community?"
"FAMILY FOREVER"
There's also truth in Redditors' claims that big players can influence the
silver market. One trader tactic is spoofing - sending out fake buy or sell
orders to shift prices before completing the real trade.
In 2020, JPMorgan paid $920 million to U.S. authorities to settle charges that
its staff sent "hundreds of thousands" of fake orders into precious metals and
Treasury markets. The bank said at the time that the people responsible had left
and it had improved its compliance systems. It declined further comment for this
story.
But the impact of spoofing lasts only seconds or minutes, said Ross Norman, a
London-based former precious metals trader.
The January squeeze lasted three days. Then WallStreetBets returned its focus to
stock markets; silver calmed. Since early February, the price of silver has
fallen by a dollar.
Undeterred, Wall Street Silver issues a deluge of tips, analysis, memes, photos
and encouragement. It is only Reddit's 3,783rd biggest community, but it is
frequently in the top 20 for volume of posts per day.
When a new member posts, Bayoukhi often responds
https://www.reddit.com/r/
Wallstreetsilver/
comments/o92fmi/silver_is_a_
national_security_commodity_covertly saying, "You are now family forever."
"HELL OF A TIME"
Reddit buyers sit at the end of a fat silver pipeline. Only about a quarter of
the 1 billion ounces or so that are produced each year is used to manufacture
the bars and coins that most of them are buying, analysts say. Most of the rest
is used for jewellery and in industrial applications.
Michael Mesaric, who runs the world's largest gold and silver refiner - Valcambi
SA, in Switzerland - says the 1,000 ounce bars of silver used in the wholesale
market are plentiful: For small investors to think they can corner the market is
"entirely wrong."
"They can engineer a squeeze on products," he said. "But silver in total?
They'll have a hell of a time."
Investors will stockpile a lot of silver this year, but less than in 2020,
according to consultants Metals Focus. Demand in the West is strong, but in
India, one of the biggest silver consuming countries, the pandemic is reducing
people's ability to buy, they say.
Funds like Blackrock's stockpiled 331 million ounces - the most ever - in 2020,
Metals Focus said in a report for the Silver Institute; bar and coin buyers took
home 200 million ounces more. This year, the consultancy expects funds to hoard
150 million ounces - the second highest level ever - and bar and coin buyers 253
million ounces.
Silver coins and bars can certainly hold their value. Higher inflation should
lift prices, as will rising demand from makers of goods like electronics and
solar panels, said Rhona O'Connell, an analyst at traders and brokers StoneX.
But she, and others at companies that trade the metal, think predictions of
$1,000 an ounce are out of this world.
Of 39 analysts and traders polled by Reuters in April, only seven thought silver
prices would average $30 or more in 2022. The highest average that they forecast
was $44.
Redditors are unmoved. Kraker, the restaurant worker, has begun reading
obsessively about inflation, money supply and other economic data. "There is a
monster around the corner," he said. "I'm trying to sharpen my stick."
(Peter Hobson reported from London; Edited by Veronica Brown and Sara Ledwith)
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