theo wrote:What is your rationale for 17.77 again?
barrytrot wrote:I'm going ALL IN today for sure. I kept holding off, but now I'm going all in on all accounts.
My personal (cash) account with it's $29 exercise price is looking like the bad-investment of the year, of course Fortunately that is far and away the lowest valued, especially now
InfleXion wrote:It's a good thing I didn't get around to buying metal last weekend. This discount is unreal! Now that we are well below cost of production, the bullish fundamentals grow even stronger. I have a feeling this will persist as long as the COMEX has metal that can be retrieved.
inflationhawk wrote:Hard to catch a falling knife
InfleXion wrote:While I would like to take your word for it common sense dictates that I defer to the most reliable sources, and the CEO of SLW recently stated their cost of production for silver is $20/oz. Barrick has put cost of production for gold at $1300 as of Q4 2012.
Additionally due to silver being mined as a byproduct that actually defers its cost of production to other metals, so in those cases it is an undervalued number.
inflationhawk wrote:Hard to catch a falling knife
Jonflyfish wrote:I am a very reliable source..........
Jonflyfish wrote:InfleXion wrote:While I would like to take your word for it common sense dictates that I defer to the most reliable sources, and the CEO of SLW recently stated their cost of production for silver is $20/oz. Barrick has put cost of production for gold at $1300 as of Q4 2012.
Additionally due to silver being mined as a byproduct that actually defers its cost of production to other metals, so in those cases it is an undervalued number.
I am a very reliable source. I said many large contracts were executed. I didn't say what a production cost was. In the event that you are buying production from someone else, you don't have production cost, only transfer cost at the contracted price. But you can believe anyone you choose. Some believe in Sprott, Schiff et al. when silver was near $49 and calling for an explosive price higher. Beliefs and market reality when dealing with a fungible commodity aren't the same thing.
Price is where people disagree on value but agree to transact. It is the ultimate arbiter and the ultimate indicator or truth i.e. "put your money where your mouth is". One can believe in snake oil or reality. In the end, the price is the price.
Cheers!
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