Lemon Thrower wrote:it won't take much more and the miners will be unprofitable. they will shutter mines and no supply will come on line. that occurs well befoer 1000, let alone 750.
now mine supply is a small part of total supply, but it has a big effect on the marginal price.
50centsaver wrote:"Deficits will grow because there are no adults in DC who have the balls to tell the truth and do the right thing."
The right thing being stop printing money, dissolve the Federal Reserve and return to a gold standard?
AGgressive Metal wrote:Remember this is the same guy that said in the late 1990s that the DOW was going to 20,000 during the first decade of the 2000s.
AGgressive Metal wrote:
Stackers care not for price fluctuations!
We are not engaging in SPECULATION. worrying and fretting over every price tick!!!
Very good reminder brother. Stack on!....and keep it real.
beauanderos wrote:Lemon Thrower wrote:it won't take much more and the miners will be unprofitable. they will shutter mines and no supply will come on line. that occurs well befoer 1000, let alone 750.
now mine supply is a small part of total supply, but it has a big effect on the marginal price.
Ok... I agreed with the first half of the sentiment... but mine supply a small part of total supply??? I guess maybe if you're referring to gold it's a different matter, but I have silver on the brain... and I'm thinking that with silver, scrap recycling is next to nothing. I would think that mine production has to account for 95% of annual silver supply.
68Camaro wrote:Possible, in very short term, for paper. Extremely unlikely IMHO. But arm yourselves with diverse opinions and be informed... believe what you want to believe, but in the end study your history and know your facts. The production costs for gold are reportedly now averaging ~$1100/oz, so I think any blip below that will be short-lived and probably only in paper gold, not physical.
argent_pur wrote:beauanderos wrote:Lemon Thrower wrote:it won't take much more and the miners will be unprofitable. they will shutter mines and no supply will come on line. that occurs well befoer 1000, let alone 750.
now mine supply is a small part of total supply, but it has a big effect on the marginal price.
Ok... I agreed with the first half of the sentiment... but mine supply a small part of total supply??? I guess maybe if you're referring to gold it's a different matter, but I have silver on the brain... and I'm thinking that with silver, scrap recycling is next to nothing. I would think that mine production has to account for 95% of annual silver supply.
According to the most recent figures I could find from the Silver Institute, mine production accounted for just over 73% of total silver supply in 2011. Their table goes back to 2002, but the proportion varies from year-to-year between about 2/3 and 3/4 of total supply coming from mine production.
Scrap represents about 1/4 of total supply, and has for the last decade at least.
http://www.silverinstitute.org/site/supply-demand/
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