by InfleXion » Wed Jun 26, 2013 9:07 pm
I would think that the mines being nationalized is more likely than the Fed snatching them up, if there is much difference.
Shooting from the gut, I don't think the goal is to bankrupt the miners, but rather that they are simply collateral damage while the price is knocked down sufficiently to unload the short position (already done for the most part) and then go long so they can profit when the bull market resumes beyond their control, which seems to be approaching fast based on physcal outflows from the COMEX showing no signs of slowing. Remember that trend began while gold was $1600 and silver was $28. The smackdowns did not incite the drain from the exchanges. It was already underway. So it appears to me that the smackdowns were a reaction rather than the cause, as in taking what they can get and running off with the physical while the getting is good.
Silver: the Rodney Dangerfield of precious metals.
If it's printed on a piece of paper it's worth the paper it's printed on.
If it's a digital asset it's worth the electrons in cyberspace.