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Silver trading, from shares and coins to bars and stocks

Silver trading, from shares and coins to bars and stocks
Silver trading, from shares and coins to bars and stocks

Silver is at an all-time record high of $84.60. This follows unprecedented gains in gold, as the dollar fell after the Trump Administration threatened to?a criminal investigation into the Federal Reserve Chairman, and due to tight supply and?high industrial interests.

How does silver trade work?

Over the Counter

London is the largest marketplace for physical silver, as well as gold. Here, banks and brokers take orders from customers around the globe to buy and sell.

Trading takes place bilaterally between financial institutions. An investor must be in a relationship to gain access to the market.

Bars of bullion in vaults of large banks like JPMorgan and HSBC are the foundations for this market.

London vaults will hold 27,818 tons of silver by the end of 2025. Silver.

Futures

Silver is also traded on futures markets. Shanghai Futures Exchange and CME Group’s?COMEX, in New York, are the two largest.

Futures contracts are agreements where the seller promises to deliver silver at a future date to the buyer. They are usually traded through a broker.

Futures are usually not held until they are delivered, but instead swapped out for future dates. Both the buyer and the seller can speculate on the price of silver without having to move and store metal.

Futures also offer the advantage that you do not have to pay for the entire amount of silver. Instead, you only need to pay a fraction, called a margin.

Exchange-Traded Funds

ETFs are traded on stock exchanges like the NYSE and LSE along with shares of publicly traded companies.

Each share of the fund represents a certain amount of silver in a vault.

Apps such as Robinhood allow small investors to trade ETFs with ease.

Silver is added to the vault in order to create new shares, bringing the price back to the original metal.

BlackRock's iShares Silver Trust is the largest, with 529 million ounces of silver, worth $39 billion today.

BARS AND COINS

Silver bars and coins are available to smaller investors from all over the world.

SILVER MINERS

Investors can buy shares of companies that mine for silver. These are also easily traded on platforms such as Robinhood.

Silver prices tend to affect the value of these shares, but other factors, such as management, debt, and performance, also influence their value. (Reporting and editing by Jan Harvey in Bengaluru, Anmol Choubey from Bengaluru)

(source: Reuters)