mortarman wrote:
To make the math easy, we've got 218 Toz. at last count, or $9352 as of friday. I'd like to sell all of it and order 18 boxes of halves a week, but the risk seems too great that we'd miss a jump in prices or the balloon goes up and we're left holding the bag, sans silver. Then again, only 1 or 2k seems weak considering how many skunk boxes have been turning up, but that could be isolated to my experience. Guess it all boils down to: a) Where is the balance b/w risk and reward? and b) At what amount of cash will the volume of silver found v. time spent looking graph start to look like an exponential function going vertical?
I appreciate yalls thoughts and suggestions.
mortarman wrote:Should've known better than to have coffee after dinner.. and it's got me to thinking. Grandpa always told me never to eat to the seeds for next spring. Didn't have any idea what he was talking about back then, but it's starting to make sense.
The wife and I have been ardently buy-and-hold types since we were unplugged back in '08. But on a soldier's salary, and a new baby boy, I haven't got much cash to go hunting with. So I've been considering the pros and cons of selling a percentage of our holdings in order to free up some to capital to search more.
To make the math easy, we've got 218 Toz. at last count, or $9352 as of friday. I'd like to sell all of it and order 18 boxes of halves a week, but the risk seems too great that we'd miss a jump in prices or the balloon goes up and we're left holding the bag, sans silver. Then again, only 1 or 2k seems weak considering how many skunk boxes have been turning up, but that could be isolated to my experience. Guess it all boils down to: a) Where is the balance b/w risk and reward? and b) At what amount of cash will the volume of silver found v. time spent looking graph start to look like an exponential function going vertical?
I appreciate yalls thoughts and suggestions.
mortarman wrote:Should've known better than to have coffee after dinner.. and it's got me to thinking. Grandpa always told me never to eat to the seeds for next spring. Didn't have any idea what he was talking about back then, but it's starting to make sense.
The wife and I have been ardently buy-and-hold types since we were unplugged back in '08. But on a soldier's salary, and a new baby boy, I haven't got much cash to go hunting with. So I've been considering the pros and cons of selling a percentage of our holdings in order to free up some to capital to search more.
To make the math easy, we've got 218 Toz. at last count, or $9352 as of friday. I'd like to sell all of it and order 18 boxes of halves a week, but the risk seems too great that we'd miss a jump in prices or the balloon goes up and we're left holding the bag, sans silver. Then again, only 1 or 2k seems weak considering how many skunk boxes have been turning up, but that could be isolated to my experience. Guess it all boils down to: a) Where is the balance b/w risk and reward? and b) At what amount of cash will the volume of silver found v. time spent looking graph start to look like an exponential function going vertical?
I appreciate yalls thoughts and suggestions.
68Camaro wrote:Well, Ray, the original complete thought is BAD - selling all. But the concept may have merit, *IF* he is getting more silver up there than you are. Depends on his yield. If he's getting a couple ounces of new silver a week, and could triple that by selling off 48 oz now, then he'll be moving from 8 oz/month to 24 ounces of silver a month. So he could afford to sell off 48 oz now if he recoups that in two months, and then continue to bring in 24 oz every month after. So don't be so quick to kill the whole thing off. He needs to let this play out in his head.
beauanderos wrote:68Camaro wrote:Well, Ray, the original complete thought is BAD - selling all. But the concept may have merit, *IF* he is getting more silver up there than you are. Depends on his yield. If he's getting a couple ounces of new silver a week, and could triple that by selling off 48 oz now, then he'll be moving from 8 oz/month to 24 ounces of silver a month. So he could afford to sell off 48 oz now if he recoups that in two months, and then continue to bring in 24 oz every month after. So don't be so quick to kill the whole thing off. He needs to let this play out in his head.
You're whole premise is based on IF. Those of us who had been sorting for awhile know how poor the returns are (it's a hobby). Price appreciation on his silver stack is a surety, finding circulating silver is a low-percentage bet. As silver prices rise, even MORE people are getting into searching. Why do you think I've abandoned it? Not worth the time, effort, or stress involved. The best idea I've seen in this thread is a variant on an idea, and one my own bank was willing to implement. If he has only $500 to invest in rolling searches, then order $2500 a week, and pick up one box a day from the bank as he searches and returns $500 daily to different locations. More work, no capital increase. There is no guarantee to silver roll hunting, despite the sometimes spectacular (but RARE) instances in which one person strikes a mother lode. The only guarantee is that you will be parked in fiat... which carries OPPORTUNITY COST, the price increase you will LOSE by not maintaining the existing stash... and this during a phase of rapidly increasing price acceleration. He can make up his own mind, but the idea makes me cringe. Backtest the idea over the last year and calculate where it would have got him. Sorry if my views run contrary to the majority here... but I'm adamant on what I've expressed here. Also... does he plan on paying taxes on the sale? Another wrench in the monkey works.
Treetop wrote:geez I wish I could get coins readily....
RR GUY wrote:The market for physical is real strong right now. Everything is selling at or above melt. Nothing wrong with taking a profit. I sold some gold yesterday. Sold it for 5% over melt. You don't have to be an all or none investor. If you only paid face, sell a little now, wait and see, maybe sell a little later. But be sure to keep a core position to provide diversification to your portfolio.
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