68Camaro wrote:Fully agree Mike. The signs are there in the background if you can tune out the noise. ASE sales are at record highs and the three North American mints are churning out government issued bullion coin at rates greater than those countries can mine the metal, so the difference is ALL essentially being imported from elsewhere.
There is supply source from scrap, recycle and recovery of old worn circulating coin, but then there is also the private mints churning out rounds and bars.
Industrial use is still on the increase.
Now is the time. I would like to be hopeful for an abilty to convert my 401K in 3 years to PM at reasonable prices, but I will not be surprised to see $100 silver by this time next year.
68Camaro wrote:Already done that and am on my second go-round of it, in fact. There is a 50K loan limit and a 4-1/2 year payoff time.
It helps but it's not the full deal. 3/4 of the 401K (including that loan, so more like 80% of it) is already in Sprott PM funds, but that it is a paper account in a brokerage, which I don't have in hand, is the fundamental issue. If the paper market goes down I could lose it all, no matter what.
beauanderos wrote:68Camaro wrote:Fully agree Mike. The signs are there in the background if you can tune out the noise. ASE sales are at record highs and the three North American mints are churning out government issued bullion coin at rates greater than those countries can mine the metal, so the difference is ALL essentially being imported from elsewhere.
There is supply source from scrap, recycle and recovery of old worn circulating coin, but then there is also the private mints churning out rounds and bars.
Industrial use is still on the increase.
Now is the time. I would like to be hopeful for an abilty to convert my 401K in 3 years to PM at reasonable prices, but I will not be surprised to see $100 silver by this time next year.
Rich, you can't borrow against the 401K to buy at these artificial lows, and pay interest back to yourself? Cheaper than paying an early withdrawal fee. The threat of nationalization or similar cypress effect on our pensions and 401k's is credible.
SilverDragon72 wrote:beauanderos wrote:68Camaro wrote:Fully agree Mike. The signs are there in the background if you can tune out the noise. ASE sales are at record highs and the three North American mints are churning out government issued bullion coin at rates greater than those countries can mine the metal, so the difference is ALL essentially being imported from elsewhere.
There is supply source from scrap, recycle and recovery of old worn circulating coin, but then there is also the private mints churning out rounds and bars.
Industrial use is still on the increase.
Now is the time. I would like to be hopeful for an abilty to convert my 401K in 3 years to PM at reasonable prices, but I will not be surprised to see $100 silver by this time next year.
Rich, you can't borrow against the 401K to buy at these artificial lows, and pay interest back to yourself? Cheaper than paying an early withdrawal fee. The threat of nationalization or similar cypress effect on our pensions and 401k's is credible.
I should look into borrowing from my plan, if I can. If so....then I could see purchasing some major PMs with it!
beauanderos wrote:Rich, you can't borrow against the 401K to buy at these artificial lows, and pay interest back to yourself? Cheaper than paying an early withdrawal fee. The threat of nationalization or similar cypress effect on our pensions and 401k's is credible.
agmoose wrote:If it hits $20 again, I'm selling a motorcycle and putting it all in physical. Until then I will continue my weekly buys and my weekend rides.
shinnosuke wrote:agmoose wrote:If it hits $20 again, I'm selling a motorcycle and putting it all in physical. Until then I will continue my weekly buys and my weekend rides.
If you knew the price would be $100 eventually, what's the difference in selling now and waiting for the possibly non-occuring $20? Just wondering how you're making the decision...not trying to give you any grief.
beauanderos wrote:Since I feel like (hope this doesn't jinx matters) that we're pretty close to a bottom, though I could be 100% wrong... I've taken on some strategic debt recently. Meaning... prices on some items on ebay were tempting enough that I opened up some new extensions of credit card debt on two cards. I have deals where I can get zero percent interest for a year, with only a three percent transaction fee in one case, four percent in the other. I wind up with a bunch of stuff I feel I got for a fair price, the downside being I now need to exercise discipline to pay down the balances each month so that they are cleared within the year and don't convert to higher rates. Will I kick myself a bit if prices drop even further? Not really. You have to determine your convictions then have the guts to make a stand upon them. So... short term? I might have given up the chance to buy a few items at even a lower purchasing price... but long term? Who here among us doesn't think that silver prices... or at least the premiums required to obtain physical... won't be significantly higher a YEAR from now? Zero percent to buy into this low? Yeah, baby... bring it on!
slickeast wrote:Yesterday
68Camaro wrote:The big money is shorting paper silver and gold. The smart money is buying physical.
If you look at a plot of price v time (not that I'm a technical zealot) we have bounced off 26-ish many times since the 2011 high. That defines a bottom with high resistance. It's a bottom the paper shorts haven't been able to break through. It's a bottom that is holding despite many attempts to sabotage it by catering to the shorts and playing with statistics and negative stories in the media. It's a bottom that has real roots in finite amounts of physical silver, increased difficulty with finding new significant sources of silver, extraordinary pressure in ability to mine still in the future due to energy issues not yet manifested, physical silver being bought for wealth preservation in record amounts, and huge industrial opportunities for silver which are still in relative infancy. It's a bottom that less than 1% of people with means are taking advantage of, and if that was to simply double to 2% the curtain will be pulled back from the wizard and true price discovery in a free market will cause silver to find its correct price, which I believe is well north of $100/oz and more like $300/oz in today's dollar, not considering or accounting for the strong inflation that is on the horizon.
68Camaro wrote:The big money is shorting paper silver and gold. The smart money is buying physical.
If you look at a plot of price v time (not that I'm a technical zealot) we have bounced off 26-ish many times since the 2011 high. That defines a bottom with high resistance. It's a bottom the paper shorts haven't been able to break through. It's a bottom that is holding despite many attempts to sabotage it by catering to the shorts and playing with statistics and negative stories in the media. It's a bottom that has real roots in finite amounts of physical silver, increased difficulty with finding new significant sources of silver, extraordinary pressure in ability to mine still in the future due to energy issues not yet manifested, physical silver being bought for wealth preservation in record amounts, and huge industrial opportunities for silver which are still in relative infancy. It's a bottom that less than 1% of people with means are taking advantage of, and if that was to simply double to 2% the curtain will be pulled back from the wizard and true price discovery in a free market will cause silver to find its correct price, which I believe is well north of $100/oz and more like $300/oz in today's dollar, not considering or accounting for the strong inflation that is on the horizon.
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