beauanderos wrote:When the common folk totally lose faith in the dollar, it will be interesting to see what happens. Will the lines at the coin shops start forming before the prices rise, or will they develop because of the price rises? If the prices reach crazy heights, will it be safe to stand in line with silver you're hoping to sell? Will people come out of the woodwork to sell family heirlooms, or will they hang on for dear life, with greed glittering in their eyes, imagining much higher prices? I think it all depends if silver takes off on it's own, or is dependent upon hyperinflation for a price boost. The longer it takes for silver to launch, the less likely people will be able to afford it as inflation eats up their discretionary income. I'm uncertain which scenario will take place, but I imagine it will be one of two 1) Silver moves up to $35-40 for six months and then nears $50 by end of 2011 2) TSHTF, COMEX collapses, SLV defaults, JPMorgan eats their shorts... and silver explodes past $100 then starts jumping in $5-7 daily increments until it reaches first $200, then $300, and eventually (by 2015) $500 an ounce. Believe it or not, I think either scenario is equally likely.
HelloMeteor wrote:beauanderos wrote:When the common folk totally lose faith in the dollar, it will be interesting to see what happens. Will the lines at the coin shops start forming before the prices rise, or will they develop because of the price rises? If the prices reach crazy heights, will it be safe to stand in line with silver you're hoping to sell? Will people come out of the woodwork to sell family heirlooms, or will they hang on for dear life, with greed glittering in their eyes, imagining much higher prices? I think it all depends if silver takes off on it's own, or is dependent upon hyperinflation for a price boost. The longer it takes for silver to launch, the less likely people will be able to afford it as inflation eats up their discretionary income. I'm uncertain which scenario will take place, but I imagine it will be one of two 1) Silver moves up to $35-40 for six months and then nears $50 by end of 2011 2) TSHTF, COMEX collapses, SLV defaults, JPMorgan eats their shorts... and silver explodes past $100 then starts jumping in $5-7 daily increments until it reaches first $200, then $300, and eventually (by 2015) $500 an ounce. Believe it or not, I think either scenario is equally likely.
What justification is there for a $500 price. Don't get me wrong, I like silver, but I read stuff like this and think people must be dreaming. You really think in 5 years silver will return 1000%+ nominally?
silverflake wrote:In regard to price of silver, if you haven't read any of Ted Butlers stuff over the last ten years READ IT! But if you are talking about the price of any kind of asset like the tech stocks of the 1990s or housing in the 2000s, the price never starts it's parabolic rise until the 'public' gets in on it. Well I can tell you, judging from the chatter at my water cooler/coffe maker at work that the public is definitely NOT in on silver (or gold for that matter). They still talk about owning equities even after watching their savings get whacked 60% in 2007-2008 then re-inflated by 70% in 2009-2010. Silver has had a 500+ percent rise over the last 8 years but it's been a slow steady rise (though this year was extra bullish- weak dollar and the whole JP Morgan investigation probably). So it may be a bumpy ride for silver the next year or 2 but I do believe higher prices are on the horizon. You want a prediction from this average Joe (with no business degree or economics degree)? I say we head back up to $50/ounce where we hit major psychological resistance because of the high from January 1980. From there I say it's fifty-fifty. It either breaks above where there's nothing holding it back from the moon (I read that $180/ounce is the inflation adjusted equivalent of $50/ounce in 1980) or it sinks back to some new supportive level where it stays for another generation (it's all cyclical isn't it?). One last thing, for about 5000 years the gold to silver ratio was 17:1 thus gold was priced at 17 times the price of silver (based on it's availability in the ground). If this resets itself (with JP Morgan out of the way now) that would mean silver would have to increase CONSIDERABLY or gold decrease considerably or they meet in the middle. It seems theres more argument for a further rise in silver. My two cents worth (copper, of course).
Pennysaved wrote:***
Personally, I do think investing in real estate is a good idea if you can do it smartly.
When inflation hits, everything will go up in value including real estate.
Being a renter in an inflationary environment will not be a good thing, rents can be increased; at least when you have a mortgage, the mortgage is usually a fixed payment.
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