messymessy wrote:I voted $5, but then realized that if it only stayed there for a week, there's NO WAY I'd be buying anything at $5. I wouldn't be able to find anyone willing to sell at that price.
Recyclersteve wrote:I haven't read all the responses yet, but want to share some thoughts. I will refrain from giving my personal opinion or age, because that is not important here. What would have been quite interesting (but much more complicated to produce) would be to see a poll with ages of the voters included. In other words, someone who is older and retired and heavily into silver already might be more likely to vote for $50, as they may not be able to stomach a collapse to $5. Also, think about trying to explain to your future heirs why silver is a great investment and they just see a senile old person who had a chance to sell for $49 in 2011 only to let it fall to $5. Someone who is in their 20's or 30's, understands the story behind silver (including the paper vs. physical aspect of silver), and doesn't have much of a stack, might just cherish the opportunity to buy anywhere near $5 an ounce. This is an incredibly interesting scenario. What if silver took the huge dive and then, all of a sudden, a big industrial user like Ford, Dupont or Apple said they were having a hard time getting enough silver to produce their products and might have to halt production until more could be located? If silver went to $5, lots of mining companies would presumably close mines (in reality, this could happen long before silver went as low as $5/oz. because the miners would presumably be losing money). Silver mining stocks could be decimated, but then again silver is often a byproduct of other metals such as zinc, copper, lead and gold, so that complicates things even more. Nonetheless, if you owned metals mining stocks on margin, you could be absolutely crushed. If silver went to $50, there would be those who would remember it getting oh so close to that price in late April, 2011 who would be talking about a double-top pattern and selling and/or shorting silver. There would be others saying we are so close to a breakout to an all-time high that if we hit it, silver will continue to run in a big way and the shorts will be crushed. I'm sure there are a number of other potential factors that I am not considering here. Nonetheless, what a great question!
fansubs_ca wrote:I think my answer would depend on whether I got advance warning to raise cash first.
Can't take advantage of $5 silver unless I actually had some cash to buy more with. ^_-
Sheikh_yer_Bu'Tay wrote:I voted for $50. At $5 the mining industry would collapse. Silver would not be in demand. At $50 the miners would increase production. Silver would be more popular. More people would buy it.... Also, the counterfeiters would ramp up production, too. Counterfeit coins would make the real stuff even more valuable.
scyther wrote:Sheikh_yer_Bu'Tay wrote:I voted for $50. At $5 the mining industry would collapse. Silver would not be in demand. At $50 the miners would increase production. Silver would be more popular. More people would buy it.... Also, the counterfeiters would ramp up production, too. Counterfeit coins would make the real stuff even more valuable.
I disagree... I think it would make people afraid to buy it. I know it's scared me away from buying silver that isn't freshly minted.
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