Engineer wrote:
You've asked me not to reply to your posts. Please grant me the same courtesy.
Civil discourse is different. I welcome that.
Cheers!
Engineer wrote:
You've asked me not to reply to your posts. Please grant me the same courtesy.
Jonflyfish wrote:Engineer wrote:
You've asked me not to reply to your posts. Please grant me the same courtesy.
Civil discourse is different. I welcome that.
Engineer wrote:Jonflyfish wrote:Engineer wrote:
You've asked me not to reply to your posts. Please grant me the same courtesy.
Civil discourse is different. I welcome that.
I don't welcome your replies, and have asked you nicely. Please cease and desist.
cupronickel wrote:gold and silver are both in contango now. The future price is higher than the spot price.
ZenOps wrote:If spot is the paper price, then if everyone was required to use no leverage to buy precious metals (margins at 100%)
Then technically, shouldn't spot price be much much lower? Contrary to popular belief most paper metal is bought fractionally with paper (meaning much less paper than commodity)
ZenOps wrote:If spot is the paper price, then if everyone was required to use no leverage to buy precious metals (margins at 100%)
Then technically, shouldn't spot price be much much lower? Contrary to popular belief most paper metal is bought fractionally with paper (meaning much less paper than commodity)
ZenOps wrote:If spot is the paper price, then if everyone was required to use no leverage to buy precious metals (margins at 100%)
Then technically, shouldn't spot price be much much lower? Contrary to popular belief most paper metal is bought fractionally with paper (meaning much less paper than commodity)
SoFa wrote:I don't understand. What type of silver and gold do you use to determine spot in this case?
Jonflyfish wrote:Engineer wrote:
You've asked me not to reply to your posts. Please grant me the same courtesy.
Civil discourse is different. I welcome that.
ZenOps wrote:If spot is the paper price, then if everyone was required to use no leverage to buy precious metals (margins at 100%)
Then technically, shouldn't spot price be much much lower? Contrary to popular belief most paper metal is bought fractionally with paper (meaning much less paper than commodity)
SoFa wrote:I don't understand. What type of silver and gold do you use to determine spot in this case?
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