Mossy wrote:If you are talking "physical", a bag of $1000 face contains about 720 ounces. I'd not call that "significant", and it would be (was) cheap to buy back around 2001 and easy leave in a corner.
For physical, I'd say a serious investor has 10,000 ounces or more.
How many? No idea. Not me, though I'm scratching up what I can.
68Camaro wrote:Mossy wrote:If you are talking "physical", a bag of $1000 face contains about 720 ounces. I'd not call that "significant", and it would be (was) cheap to buy back around 2001 and easy leave in a corner.
For physical, I'd say a serious investor has 10,000 ounces or more.
How many? No idea. Not me, though I'm scratching up what I can.
Interesting cut-off. You're not a serious investor if you don't have nearly 400,000 in physical silver? Dude, the number of people with $400,000 in savings period (regardless of PM or not) would automatically cut out 99.99 percent of the population.
Something like only 5% of people have any significant savings period. Much less physical PM. (Remember, more than half the people don't even pay income tax anymore.)
It's an arbitrary bar, but at 10,000 oz I think you've raised the bar too high to matter. If the purpose of this is to try the assess whether the middle and upper middle classes, who actually have some savings, have moved some, most, or all of it to silver, you've got to set that bar in the hundred of ounces.
kidman232 wrote:i would say anything over 20 oz's of silver does not happen by accident and would consider them self a significant silver investor
Rodebaugh wrote:I don't know.....
I have 35oz in sterling silver flatware (ASW)....that could happen by accident to some lucky yardsale patron needing flatware.
not likely....but a guy can hope!
68Camaro wrote: Interesting cut-off. You're not a serious investor if you don't have nearly 400,000 in physical silver? Dude, the number of people with $400,000 in savings period (regardless of PM or not) would automatically cut out 99.99 percent of the population.
Something like only 5% of people have any significant savings period. Much less physical PM. (Remember, more than half the people don't even pay income tax anymore.)
It's an arbitrary bar, but at 10,000 oz I think you've raised the bar too high to matter. If the purpose of this is to try the assess whether the middle and upper middle classes, who actually have some savings, have moved some, most, or all of it to silver, you've got to set that bar in the hundred of ounces.
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