beauanderos wrote:Take your investment capital and divide it into four parts. Watch the daily pricing action at Kitco. Get a feel for the rhythm of price movements (the market is generally higher at open than close). Either take your first portion of money and invest now, or wait for a day when there is a modest pullback (.50 to a dollar). Then wait 3 months and repeat, until you've invested your money. Take a look at the seasonality of silver, you can usually buy it cheapest during the summer months... but by then cheaper might mean a pullback of $5 from a level of $42-43. Don't try to time the markets for quick profits by selling your bullion, invest for a lifetime and buy more on pullbacks.
Corsair wrote:If you plan to hold on to whatever you invest in for 20+ years, why not think heavily about copper? Silver has been soaring recently. You hear an awful lot of commercials touting it. But copper...pennies have gone up, what, .2x face recently? Not quite leaps and bounds.
You have to ask yourself: Why am I investing? Do you want to preserve your buying power? Or are you looking to make a quick buck? If it's the former, then why not put half of your nest egg into copper? It really has no downside at all. Silver, on the other hand. Well, you said it yourself. You bought at $5/oz. What if, when that time comes, and you desperately need FRNs, silver is back down in the slums? Something to think about.
HelloMeteor wrote:Corsair wrote:If you plan to hold on to whatever you invest in for 20+ years, why not think heavily about copper? Silver has been soaring recently. You hear an awful lot of commercials touting it. But copper...pennies have gone up, what, .2x face recently? Not quite leaps and bounds.
You have to ask yourself: Why am I investing? Do you want to preserve your buying power? Or are you looking to make a quick buck? If it's the former, then why not put half of your nest egg into copper? It really has no downside at all. Silver, on the other hand. Well, you said it yourself. You bought at $5/oz. What if, when that time comes, and you desperately need FRNs, silver is back down in the slums? Something to think about.
In order to have thousands of dollars of copper, you're talking about thousands of lbs. Sorry, that's just silly for most people.
Half your nest egg? So a few tens of thousand, maybe hundreds of thouands of lbs. How many tons of copper do you want to have on hand?
HelloMeteor wrote:It could always drop by half. Remember 2008?
I like silver, but everyone here is way too certain about its future.
HelloMeteor wrote:It could always drop by half. Remember 2008?
I like silver, but everyone here is way too certain about its future.
Ethon wrote:HelloMeteor wrote:It could always drop by half. Remember 2008?
I like silver, but everyone here is way too certain about its future.
Good point about the 2008 drop, but it did bounce back up, I think silver might have a drop but I also think it will bounce back.
HelloMeteor wrote:Ethon wrote:HelloMeteor wrote:It could always drop by half. Remember 2008?
I like silver, but everyone here is way too certain about its future.
Good point about the 2008 drop, but it did bounce back up, I think silver might have a drop but I also think it will bounce back.
I agree. BUT, we all need to keep in mind, it's no sure thing, especially those who are just starting. People probably said the same thing back in 1980 or thereabouts. They WERE right, but it took a long time for them to be right.
And yes, if it did drop by half, I'd buy a lot of physical and probably go long on some option calls(if my online trader allowed me) to that end as well. I also think it would bounce back in roughly the time it took after the 2008 drop, or less time. But if someone buys a lot now and it goes down, they're going to feel pretty lousy, especially if they are new to this.
I just get scared by posts written by someone who doesn't have much silver who wants to put a lot of money into it after a very large run-up.
Treetop wrote:HelloMeteor wrote:It could always drop by half. Remember 2008?
I like silver, but everyone here is way too certain about its future.
I do agree it could drop, though i highly doubt by half at this point..... but long term, I see it much higher....
Market Harmony wrote:Just buy it and forget about it if your time horizon is 20 years... imagine silver is $500 20 years from now. You'll pat yourself on the back if you only bought for $30. Are you going to give yourself extra pats if you bought it at $26 or $27 instead? One thing is for sure, if you don't buy it, then you'll surely be kicking yourself. Don't sweat the small stuff.
stateofmind wrote:The bull market will begin to end in about ten years. Best place to put your money then is in stocks. Get rid of the silver and buy gold as portfolio protection when the bull is dead.
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