beauanderos wrote:I don't know why you find this alarming. Why does it matter who owns precious metals? As long as they are in strong hands they implement a quicker eventual run-up in price. Americans dishoarding metals? Of course they are, out of ignorance, greed, or the need for instant gratification. 99% of Americans don't own precious metals, and the few that come temporarily into possession of it soon sell for nominal profits. By the time there is a significant price rise, severe sourcing problems will exist... you will not be able to buy affordable silver because it won't be found. Just as there is now a premium on silver when there is a huge price dip, so shall the same occur as prices gain exponential momentum. Those who hold them will not sell at spot, but will demand a healthy premium, as the price is moving so fast that by the time they receive payment the fiat they gain will have lost a portion of it's value. Would you sell silver at $500 an ounce, when you know it will be $550 or $600 before your payment clears? No... you would either not sell to begin with, or demand a premium so that you gain fair compensation in a fast-moving market. The day is coming folks, not too far off now.
theo wrote: But make no mistake, every suitcase full of PMs leaving for China or India will decrease the pool of capital needed to rebuild our economy in the coming years.
Engineer wrote:theo wrote: But make no mistake, every suitcase full of PMs leaving for China or India will decrease the pool of capital needed to rebuild our economy in the coming years.
+1
Ray is looking more at the short term which suits his needs and you can't blame him for that. Many of us, however, are trying to plan for the next twenty years instead of the next twenty months.
theo wrote:Below is an excerpt from the comments section (page 2) of an article. The idea that foriegners are buying and removing PMs from this country is very troubling to me (not that I blame them). This is the first time I've heard this although it sounds fairly credible to me. I'm curious as to how prevailent this is. Has anyone else heard about or seen this happening?
If this is actually happening on a large enough scale, it means that buying physical PMs should be done not only to protect ones wealth, but also to ensure that a certain amount of physical bullion remains on the right side of the Atlantic/Pacific.
"The few active buyers are well-informed, deep-pocketed and predominantly foreign. This to me was the biggest and most concerning (for the US) point of Robert's interview. After many decades of amassing bullion from around the world, the US populace is now blindly dis-hording that wealth. It's now going to very savvy buyers who are buying based on a fundamental appreciation of the true future value of gold & silver. They buy in big quantities on a regular basis, and make even bigger ones during price downdrafts. And much of what they buy goes outside the US (Robert sees the biggest demand from Asia these days).
As an adjunct to this last point, I dropped by Robert's shop at the end of the day yesterday to let him know we published the interview. We chatted about these points above, and he observed that I was the only non-foreign customer who had come into his shop that day. Almost as if on cue, a regular customer of his from India walked in the door and quickly purchased nearly $35k in bullion. "
http://www.chrismartenson.com/blog/robe ... 1#comments
scrapper2010 wrote:At first glance I thought, damn, Ray was a history major at Oxford? Then I realized I missed the first sentence.
Nickelmeister wrote:theo wrote:Below is an excerpt from the comments section (page 2) of an article. The idea that foriegners are buying and removing PMs from this country is very troubling to me (not that I blame them). This is the first time I've heard this although it sounds fairly credible to me. I'm curious as to how prevailent this is. Has anyone else heard about or seen this happening?
If this is actually happening on a large enough scale, it means that buying physical PMs should be done not only to protect ones wealth, but also to ensure that a certain amount of physical bullion remains on the right side of the Atlantic/Pacific.
"The few active buyers are well-informed, deep-pocketed and predominantly foreign. This to me was the biggest and most concerning (for the US) point of Robert's interview. After many decades of amassing bullion from around the world, the US populace is now blindly dis-hording that wealth. It's now going to very savvy buyers who are buying based on a fundamental appreciation of the true future value of gold & silver. They buy in big quantities on a regular basis, and make even bigger ones during price downdrafts. And much of what they buy goes outside the US (Robert sees the biggest demand from Asia these days).
As an adjunct to this last point, I dropped by Robert's shop at the end of the day yesterday to let him know we published the interview. We chatted about these points above, and he observed that I was the only non-foreign customer who had come into his shop that day. Almost as if on cue, a regular customer of his from India walked in the door and quickly purchased nearly $35k in bullion. "
http://www.chrismartenson.com/blog/robe ... 1#comments
Not to be a $hit disturber, but who says we (North Americans) are from the "right side" of the ocean?
As a cash-for-gold operator, I see the daily transfer of PMs from weak (sellers) to strong (buyers) hands.
Nationality of the purchasers is pretty much irrelevent, except from the perspective of American egocentrism.
theo wrote:Nickelmeister wrote:theo wrote:Below is an excerpt from the comments section (page 2) of an article. The idea that foriegners are buying and removing PMs from this country is very troubling to me (not that I blame them). This is the first time I've heard this although it sounds fairly credible to me. I'm curious as to how prevailent this is. Has anyone else heard about or seen this happening?
If this is actually happening on a large enough scale, it means that buying physical PMs should be done not only to protect ones wealth, but also to ensure that a certain amount of physical bullion remains on the right side of the Atlantic/Pacific.
"The few active buyers are well-informed, deep-pocketed and predominantly foreign. This to me was the biggest and most concerning (for the US) point of Robert's interview. After many decades of amassing bullion from around the world, the US populace is now blindly dis-hording that wealth. It's now going to very savvy buyers who are buying based on a fundamental appreciation of the true future value of gold & silver. They buy in big quantities on a regular basis, and make even bigger ones during price downdrafts. And much of what they buy goes outside the US (Robert sees the biggest demand from Asia these days).
As an adjunct to this last point, I dropped by Robert's shop at the end of the day yesterday to let him know we published the interview. We chatted about these points above, and he observed that I was the only non-foreign customer who had come into his shop that day. Almost as if on cue, a regular customer of his from India walked in the door and quickly purchased nearly $35k in bullion. "
http://www.chrismartenson.com/blog/robe ... 1#comments
Not to be a $hit disturber, but who says we (North Americans) are from the "right side" of the ocean?
As a cash-for-gold operator, I see the daily transfer of PMs from weak (sellers) to strong (buyers) hands.
Nationality of the purchasers is pretty much irrelevent, except from the perspective of American egocentrism.
You should understand I wasn't making a value judgement; I was speaking from the prospective of my nationality, which is American. If you re-read my comments you'll note that I don't blame the Chinese and Indian nationals for taking advantage of what they view as bargain prices. I would do the same thing in their position. If there is any blame to be assigned, it is on our political and economic leaders for promoting policies that caused this to happen.
To say that it is irrelevant as to which nation holds more gold/silver seems misguided to me. As I said before PMs represent future investment capital. Any nation which loses too great a percentage of their capital will find itself at a significant disadvantage. As an American I hope that doesn't happen to my country, although I fear that it is. If that makes me a bad global citizen, so be it.
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