* Peso slid to record low vs the dollar in January
* Silver miners seen benefiting from lower costs
* Mexican silver mining equities vs peso: http://reut.rs/2kpRxZX
By Jan Harvey
LONDON, Feb 16 (Reuters) - Investors are picking up on the benefits for Mexican silver miners of one of the biggest foreign exchange stories since November's U.S. election, with the slide in the peso pushing costs lower while silver prices are ramping up.
The peso hit a record low last month at 22.03 to the dollar, pressured by concern over a potential trade war between the United States and Mexico in the wake of Donald Trump's U.S. election victory.
While some say the worst of the currency's slide may be over, the peso is expected to remain weak throughout this year, a Reuters poll showed this month.
Between 60 percent and 70 percent of silver miners' costs in Mexico -- from labour to power -- are priced in pesos, an industry analyst estimates. For a company that sells its output in dollars, that suggests a significant benefit to cost margins.
"The fall in the peso has improved costs not just for the silver producers, but for all miners in Mexico," said George Cheveley, portfolio manager at the Investec Global Natural Resources fund.
"That's against a background where we see silver itself as attractive."
Investec has increased exposure to silver in recent months in both its Natural Resources fund, which has $300 million in assets under management, and its Global Gold Fund, he said.
Mexico is the world's biggest silver producer, with output of 192 million ounces in 2015.
According to metals markets research team GFMS, analysis on the five largest domestic Mexican silver mining companies suggests that the drop in the peso alone has led to an average 7 percent margin gain.
TWIN-PRONGED SUPPORT
Silver prices are also forecast to post their strongest year since 2014, benefiting from stronger industrial demand and its attraction as a haven from risk amid uncertainties surrounding the U.S. economy under Trump, Britain's decision to leave the EU and forthcoming European elections.
Shares in Fresnillo, the world's biggest primary silver producer, are up 27 percent this year. Among other Mexico-focused silver miners, First Majestic is up 34 percent, Endeavour Silver 39 percent and Great Panther Silver 24 percent.
Those have outstripped the 15 percent gain in the S&P/TSX Global Mining Index and a 12 percent rise in the silver price. And that is before the reduction in costs has been fully factored in, the GFMS analysis shows.
Keith Watson, of New City Investment Managers, said that his fund took on exposure to Toronto-listed Americas Silver , which recently started construction on the San Rafael project in Mexico, in the fourth quarter of last year and extended that position early this year. It also bought into First Majestic in the second half.