Computer Jones wrote:....Meanwhile back at the ranch...
Tonto, disguised as a teabag, was up to his neck in hot water.
Computer Jones wrote:....Meanwhile back at the ranch...
Thogey wrote:Sweet,
Blood in the streets.
TwoPenniesEarned wrote:I really wish I'd have just been making mortgage payments instead of stacking at this point.
Engineer wrote:TwoPenniesEarned wrote:I really wish I'd have just been making mortgage payments instead of stacking at this point.
As much as I like PMs, it's hard to argue against paying down a mortgage. The benefits are defined and if you put up an extra principal payment, it'll save the amount you'd pay in interest the next month. If you're in the first few years of a mortgage, it's nearly a 100% ROI...with the added bonus of getting off the debt treadmill a month earlier.
TwoPenniesEarned wrote:Since most of the investments I buy are not good, I suspect that because I really loaded up on silver that it will indeed tackle $15. If my luck holds, I will have no money to "back up the truck" with, having already done so at the various stages of the drop from $49.
I'm certainly at the point of beginning to feel demoralized by the price, so perhaps we're near bottom. I bought silver because of what bankers were doing to our money. I can't believe, after everything they have done to undermine the value of fiat in the past 6 years, that scumbag bankers are still able to blow the bottom out of PM's with the push of a few buttons and load up on the cheap. And the world is playing ball. Obviously someone is selling at these levels, which is why they are holding. I agree with David Morgan that you can manipulate short term market action, but not the longer term market. We're at the level where the longer term market just is this cheap. So now despite all the money printing, it would have been better to be in cash.
I really wish I'd have just been making mortgage payments instead of stacking at this point. Which is ridiculous given all of the scandals and greed and money printing...but there you go. I guess bankers do own everything, except my exceptionally devalued stack. But they get to print some money and buy my neighbour's paper stack, and then they'll get out at just the right time before the government passes laws prohibiting the sale or transfer or possession of coins unless you pay some ludicrous new tax that will go in just after the bankers have gone out of PMs.
InfleXion wrote:I prefer to pay down the mortgage and stack. My stack can follow me wherever I go, my home can't.
InfleXion wrote:I prefer to pay down the mortgage and stack. My stack can follow me wherever I go, my home can't. I don't have any other debt and sure debt is debt but paying off a home takes years so I approach it from the standpoint of not acquiring debt with this particular exception. Hopefully one day I can pay my home off with my stack, but regardless there is no substitute for sound money. I have no regrets buying at higher prices, because there is no question about value in my mind. I never planned on trying to do a quick flip so it's not money I need to get back. I could have had more ounces, but I haven't lost any money because really I gained real money at an exchange ratio that is still very beneficial IMO which is why I wanted it. Nothing happened at $49 that isn't still happening now fundamentally, as in not including speculators and market makers. If the goal is to get rich the greed could burn you, but if it's approached from the standpoint of having and holding superior money for as long as it takes I think it will be rewarding.
scyther wrote:I think fiat is sufficiently divisible. Much more divisible than gold, for practical purposes.
InfleXion wrote:I will meet you halfway inflationhawk in that fiat currency is what we have to use to settle our debts, but it is not real money. Real money is fungible, divisible, durable, and portable. Fiat currency fails the durability test, and is less divisible since you can't cut it in half or put flame to it and still make change.
Maybe I meant to say sound money instead of real money in those instances, if there is a difference.
But yes I would not forgo my cash cushion for metals because then I might have to sell some when I don't want to.
scyther wrote:I think fiat is sufficiently divisible. Much more divisible than gold, for practical purposes.
inflationhawk wrote:That being said, PLEASE don't rename the site Soundcent!!!
inflationhawk wrote:Not sure where the 17.77 comes from, but the short term trend is sure heading that way. Good time for adding to the stack.
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