Both Gold And Silver Peaked In 1980

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In real (inflation-adjusted) dollars, both gold and silver prices peaked in 1980. We’ll take a look at the charts for the two metals and discuss their applicability to current price expectations. Let's first take a look at silver.


Silver

The first chart for silver shows the history for the past century based on average monthly closing prices.


Silver Prices: 100-Year Historical Chart

Silver Prices - 100 Year Historical Chart

(Click on image to enlarge)

Image Source: MacroTrends

The ascending trendline dating back to the mid-1930's might seem appealing; especially for a patient long-term investor. But, as we know when looking at longer-term charts, or making projections for any number of things, such as investments (stocks, real estate, etc.), sales, cost of doing business, retirement planning, etc., we need to account for the effects of inflation.

In this case, we are specifically interested in the effects of inflation on the silver price over the past century. In other words, how much of silver’s price increase from $.28 in 1932 to $23.00 currently is represented by “real” profits, and how much of that increase is simply due to “the effects of inflation.”

Below is a second chart. The price history is the same as that in the first chart, except that the prices have been adjusted for the effects of inflation.


Silver Prices (Inflation-Adjusted): 100-Year Historical Chart

Silver Prices (inflation-adjusted) - 100 Year Historical Chart

(Click on image to enlarge)

Image Source: MacroTrends

The ascending trendline from the first chart is much more subdued, and the volatility is more extreme. In support of what we said earlier, it is clear that the price of silver peaked in 1980. In addition, each succeeding peak is consequentially lower than the preceding one. Here is one more chart for silver, which should help clarify how poorly the silver price has performed historically.


Silver Prices (Inflation-Adjusted): 1971-2024

Silver Prices (inflation-adjusted) 1971-2024

(Click on image to enlarge)

Image Source: MacroTrends

In October 1971, the price of silver was $1.31. From there, it rose to a high of $5.78 in February 1974. In today’s inflation-adjusted dollars, the February 1974 price of $5.78 is now $37.59. That means that the current silver price of close to $23.00 oz. is cheaper by 39% than in it was in February 1974.

Another way to say it is that the current silver price of $23.00 is the equivalent of $3.52 in constant dollars basis in 1974. Keep in mind that this was eight years before the all-time price peak for silver in 1980.

In January of 1980, the average monthly closing price for silver was $36.00 oz. It is pretty easy to see that today’s silver price of $23.00 is considerably lower than its January 1980 peak of $36.00. Imagine that you bought a stock at 36 and it dropped to 23; you would have a loss of 36%.

You wouldn’t be happy, especially in light of the fact that you had held that stock for forty-four years. The long holding period makes the loss much worse because in constant dollars, the real loss is 83% (down from the inflation-adjusted high of $140 oz. in January 1980).


Gold

As with silver, our first chart for gold illustrates its century-long price history.


Gold Prices: 100-Year Historical Chart

Gold Prices - 100 Year Historical Chart

(Click on image to enlarge)

Image Source: MacroTrends

As can be seen, there is a similar ascending uptrend for gold, as was the case for silver. Gold, however, has gone on to mark new, higher prices since its previous peaks, which was not the case with silver. We, know, however, that this can change when the effects of inflation are factored in. The second gold chart illustrates this.


Gold Prices (Inflation-Adjusted): 100-Year Historical Chart

                            Gold Prices (inflation-adjusted) - 100 Year Historical Chart

(Click on image to enlarge)

Image Source: MacroTrends

As with silver, the effects of inflation give us additional information that helps us see more clearly what has happened to the gold price over the past 100 years. The successive price peaks in gold, rather than declining in dramatic fashion as with silver, often return to the previous point, albeit not quite as high.

The price comparisons for gold are much better than what we found with silver, as well. Gold’s recent high of $2060 oz., while still more than 20% lower than its 1980 inflation-adjusted peak of $2670 ($677), is far and away better than silver, which currently is 83% percent lower than its 1980 price peak.

The superior price performance for gold is amplified on the chart below.


Gold Prices (Inflation-Adjusted): 1971-2024

Gold Prices Inflation adjusted chart

(Click on image to enlarge)

Image Source: MacroTrends


Comments on Silver 

The hype associated with silver price projections and predictions is often unjustified. Using previous price history to support those predictions without allowing for the effects of inflation presents a distorted picture and leads to unrealistic expectations. Silver is an industrial metal. Its role as money is secondary to its use in industry. That has always been the case, and it will remain so.

The argument about silver being a hedge against inflation is a joke. What protection against inflation has silver provided when it is cheaper by 84% than in was four decades ago?

There is a perfectly justifiable reason to own silver coins as “emergency” money against the threat of financial system collapse. However, expecting to get rich by investing in silver is a pipe dream. You might do very well in the short-term if you are a trader and your timing is impeccable. But those occasions are infrequent and short-lived.


Comments on Gold 

As far as gold is concerned, it is real money and a long-term store of value. Its primary value is in its use as money. It is the standard by which all other moneys are measured and compared. Nevertheless, expectations for huge increases in its price are unrealistic.

The only reason the price of gold increases over time is to reflect the effects of inflation that have already occurred. The “effects of inflation” show up as a loss of purchasing power in the U.S. dollar. This is true no matter which currency gold is priced in.

Over the past century, the U.S. dollar has lost 99% of its purchasing power. The cost for the goods and services we buy and use has increased one-hundred fold. So, too, has the gold price increased by that same multiple ($20.67 x 100 = $2067). As long as the dollar continues to lose purchasing power, the price of gold will continue to move higher over time. Historically, that can come after long delays; and only in hindsight.

Since gold is close to being fully-priced currently with respect to the dollar’s loss of purchasing power, it can only move significantly higher after the further loss of U.S. dollar purchasing power.

Over the decades and centuries, the purchasing power of gold remains stable. Its higher price reflects deterioration in an inferior form of money, i.e., fiat currency. Owning gold is for capital preservation. Expectations for a much higher gold price resulting from geopolitical issues, social unrest, wars, changes in interest rates, a weak economy, etc., are unrealistic and unsupported historically.

Those who expect to make ‘a ton of money when gold goes to the moon’ might be right, but the money would be worthless by that time. Under conditions like those, gold will retain its value/purchasing power.

To reiterate, expectations for a much higher gold price resulting from geopolitical issues, social unrest, wars, changes in interest rates, a weak economy, etc., are unrealistic and unsupported historically.


Conclusion

There are good reasons to own both gold and silver. Both are superior alternatives to the U.S. dollar when used as money. Owing some silver coins has merit, but gold is real money and the preferred choice for sound money and capital preservation.


More By This Author:

Justification For Gold
The ABCs Of Gold Prices
Viewing Gold In Its Proper Context

Kelsey Williams Is The Author Of Two Books: Inflation, What It Is, What It Isn't, And Who's Responsible For It And  more

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