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Through history, silver bullion has served mankind as one of the most critical and primary monetary metal. It is durable, divisible, convenient, retains utility and industrial value, and cannot be created by fiat (I.e. Government printing presses).

However, unlike its sister monetary metal, gold, silver is most often used in industrial applications. Industrial demand for silver has grown consistently for the past three decades because of silver's myriad unique properties, including strength, malleability, and ductility, as well as its unparalleled electrical and thermal conductivity, its sensitivity to and reflectance of light, and its ability to withstand extreme temperature ranges.

In addition to its industrial uses and qualities, silver is also used widely in health care applications because of the unique antibacterial characteristics.  Silver is used by hospitals to prevent bacterial infections in burn victims. Dressings and other wound care applications incorporate fabric containing silver for the prevention of secondary infections.

Estimates suggest that approximately 95% of all the silver ever mined throughout history has already been consumed by industrial use. That silver is gone forever, unrecoverable at any price. In 1900, there were approximately 12 billion ounces of silver worldwide. Today, that figure has fallen to about 300 million ounces of above-ground, refined silver. This means that at current prices, it would only take about four billion dollars to purchase all of the above-ground silver in the world today.

Anyone following the world’s headlines is aware of increasing and ever-present geopolitical instability. This, combined with the precipitous drop of the US dollar, may be viewed as bullish for the silver market. Silver's historic role as a store of value and investment, and its increasing demand in an environment where growing industrial use exceeds available new supplies, further suggest a bullish trend for this versatile metal.

Some of the world's leading financial analysts believe that silver is among the world's most important commodities, with tremendous investment opportunity for the future. Silver's unique properties, which make it ideal and essential for global industry, create a situation where there is simply no substitute. In addition, silver prices at times have been extremely volatile, making silver an attractive investment and trading vehicle.

Adding to it’s benefit as a true hard currency in times of distress, it becomes ever more clear that silver makes sense to own as both a currency and a hedge to inflation.
Silver Bullion as a Hard Currency