Hawkeye wrote:I need it to stay low until until Thursday. This is not good. I'm like a silver addict - "c'mon man, just one more hit of cheap silver before it goes back up." I'm starting to get jittery. Of course, tomorrow it might be down to $20. Who knows. I think I'm going to just buy a little when I can and stop worrying about the fluctuations.
Market Harmony wrote:How much longer until we see it go down just as sharply? Or make another move like this higher?
These volatile moves like this don't give me too much confidence in the market's ability to portray actual value... unless a move like this is event driven, I don't see how 1000 ounces could be worth $22,000 one minute, and $23,000 just ten minutes later. Without getting into the conspiracy theories and facts of price manipulation, there is something not right with a market structure that cannot seem to find a balance of bid/ask prices in a paper atmosphere. If it were truly to exist in order for real users to hedge their positions/output, then the bid/ask would represent something different than speculation.
I cannot wrap my brain around this... this concept of violent price swings in a sophisticated market. It is a good thing that I do not have to predict price movements. I'll leave that up to others and have them shoulder the weight of the world
Market Harmony wrote:These volatile moves like this don't give me too much confidence in the market's ability to portray actual value... unless a move like this is event driven, I don't see how 1000 ounces could be worth $22,000 one minute, and $23,000 just ten minutes later. Without getting into the conspiracy theories and facts of price manipulation, there is something not right with a market structure that cannot seem to find a balance of bid/ask prices in a paper atmosphere. If it were truly to exist in order for real users to hedge their positions/output, then the bid/ask would represent something different than speculation.
natsb88 wrote:Market Harmony wrote:These volatile moves like this don't give me too much confidence in the market's ability to portray actual value... unless a move like this is event driven, I don't see how 1000 ounces could be worth $22,000 one minute, and $23,000 just ten minutes later. Without getting into the conspiracy theories and facts of price manipulation, there is something not right with a market structure that cannot seem to find a balance of bid/ask prices in a paper atmosphere. If it were truly to exist in order for real users to hedge their positions/output, then the bid/ask would represent something different than speculation.
Nonsense. The paper markets are the true mechanisms of price discovery. The 7% drop over the course of a few minutes and then the 10% swing back up a few minutes later simply reflect the true supply and demand for physical silver. Everybody was late to work this morning so nobody was ordering silver when the market opened...then a few minutes later all the industrial users called in their orders for the week and the price went back up to reflect the new demand. There is no room for manipulation in a large liquid pool like silver futures. It's a zero sum game. Besides, silver is an industrial material; the percentage of silver contracts bought and sold by speculators is small enough that they are inconsequential to the market price.
And leaving $23-based price tags on the silver in your store's display case when spot has fallen to $22? That's extortion, sir. It's your responsibility to hedge your inventory. You are obligated to sell at $22-based prices if somebody walks into your store during a brief dip and demands to buy at that price. The physical silver you own and the customer wants to buy...the value of that is set by paper market, not by you two. To think otherwise is unscrupulous.
Jonflyfish wrote:I could be 100% wrong of course so don't be influenced by what I say and always DYOD(Do Your Own Diligence). Having said that, it looks as though there may be plenty of selling into any rally from the crowd who feel- "Silver can't go down, OMG! I bought big when it was 3x-4x because the silver whatever dot com site had reason after reason why silver has to obviously go up with clear certainty and to buy and BUY NOW! At this point, I just want to get out with whatever I have remaining." I know folks here would never think that way but there are many who do.
Cheers!
Market Harmony wrote:How much longer until we see it go down just as sharply? Or make another move like this higher?
These volatile moves like this don't give me too much confidence in the market's ability to portray actual value... unless a move like this is event driven, I don't see how 1000 ounces could be worth $22,000 one minute, and $23,000 just ten minutes later. Without getting into the conspiracy theories and facts of price manipulation, there is something not right with a market structure that cannot seem to find a balance of bid/ask prices in a paper atmosphere. If it were truly to exist in order for real users to hedge their positions/output, then the bid/ask would represent something different than speculation.
I cannot wrap my brain around this... this concept of violent price swings in a sophisticated market. It is a good thing that I do not have to predict price movements. I'll leave that up to others and have them shoulder the weight of the world
Jonflyfish wrote:natsb88 wrote:Market Harmony wrote:These volatile moves like this don't give me too much confidence in the market's ability to portray actual value... unless a move like this is event driven, I don't see how 1000 ounces could be worth $22,000 one minute, and $23,000 just ten minutes later. Without getting into the conspiracy theories and facts of price manipulation, there is something not right with a market structure that cannot seem to find a balance of bid/ask prices in a paper atmosphere. If it were truly to exist in order for real users to hedge their positions/output, then the bid/ask would represent something different than speculation.
Nonsense. The paper markets are the true mechanisms of price discovery. The 7% drop over the course of a few minutes and then the 10% swing back up a few minutes later simply reflect the true supply and demand for physical silver. Everybody was late to work this morning so nobody was ordering silver when the market opened...then a few minutes later all the industrial users called in their orders for the week and the price went back up to reflect the new demand. There is no room for manipulation in a large liquid pool like silver futures. It's a zero sum game. Besides, silver is an industrial material; the percentage of silver contracts bought and sold by speculators is small enough that they are inconsequential to the market price.
And leaving $23-based price tags on the silver in your store's display case when spot has fallen to $22? That's extortion, sir. It's your responsibility to hedge your inventory. You are obligated to sell at $22-based prices if somebody walks into your store during a brief dip and demands to buy at that price. The physical silver you own and the customer wants to buy...the value of that is set by paper market, not by you two. To think otherwise is unscrupulous.
Excellent! You are right! As someone with a conflict of interest, you have to be. After all, nowhere else in the world trades metals but in the Copper Cave. The precipitous drop in silver prices from the peak near $50 was only from the disconnected fictitious "paper traders"....until it wasn't...all the way down No way/no how those silly hedges could possibly offset this- preposterous!
Cheers!
scyther wrote:JFF, I have to say that whatever I thought of your predictions (or whatever you want to call them), you always seemed calm and collected in the past. What happened? Now you're just being an immature troll. Get over it.
theo wrote:I've often thought that silver's price decline over the past two years has been aided, in part, by the destruction of the speculative longs. Hundreds, perhaps even thousands, of fortunes were lost during the handful of waterfall crashes we've seen in silver since Spring 2011 (especially the Mayday Massacre). This amounts to literal demand destruction as many those were willing to take speculative positions in silver no longer have the capital to do so. Those investors who still have some of their wealth are cowed by not-so-subtle warning: "speculate with the shiny stuff and we'll make you pay." The rest of the investing public are sagely told by their brokers and the MSM that silver is a risky, volatile investment that should be avoided.
Jonflyfish wrote:After all, nowhere else in the world trades metals but in the Copper Cave. The precipitous drop in silver prices from the peak near $50 was only from the disconnected fictitious "paper traders"....until it wasn't...all the way down
natsb88 wrote:
JFF, I am not making any personal attacks, I am not calling your motives into question, and I am not twisting your words. I am simply presenting my thoughts in a meaningful discussion. If you choose to reply directly to my post, I respectfully ask that you refrain from the tired "you're a physical dealer so everything you say is biased" mantra and instead focus on the actual issue of discussion. There is no need for this to devolve into a petty contest of who can get the last word in, it's a waste of everyone's time.
Jonflyfish wrote:natsb88 wrote:
JFF, I am not making any personal attacks, I am not calling your motives into question, and I am not twisting your words. I am simply presenting my thoughts in a meaningful discussion. If you choose to reply directly to my post, I respectfully ask that you refrain from the tired "you're a physical dealer so everything you say is biased" mantra and instead focus on the actual issue of discussion. There is no need for this to devolve into a petty contest of who can get the last word in, it's a waste of everyone's time.
Um, I disagree. Your "Narrative" to MH was without any doubt obviously mimicking my comments with twisted untrue undertones and false suggestion of what I have actually stated. I am unbiased and do not have a conflict of interest. I don't need to pump a story or feed people's minds into buying (or selling). Supposition and speculative story telling does not make anything come true either.
Truth in price.
Cheers!
Return to Silver Bullion, Gold, & other Bullion Metals
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 13 guests