paymehigher wrote:do you think there is that much 90% silver left out there?
Rodebaugh wrote:Will 90% Silver Dry up First?
In short.....NO
Long answer......it may become scarce to market at times as any supply vs demand commodity does, but rest assured it is the king and the reserves are there.
Folks, lets cut the speculation hogwash and run the numbers. 90% is going nowhere and here's why.
Let us evaluate the commonly traded 90% that the US has minted:
21351.5 metric tons Washington Quarters
15756.0 metric tons Bens, Kens, and Walkers
20906.6 metric tons Mercs and Rosies.
58014 METRIC TONS of Common 90%. Folks this doesn't include the Barber series and Standing Libertys we often see in junk, and i'm not even counting the first Peace or Morgan dollar in this number because that would blow this comparison to orbit. These are just the common fractional 90% coins. Wait!, I know what your thinking and resist the urge of...."but gee wiz doc; I was told they melted a bunch of them there silver coins in da 80's". My answer.....So What? Let's say they melted a full 50% of them (which is grossly inflated estimate). That still leaves us with approximately 30 THOUSAND METRIC TONS of fractional common 90% floating around.
So how much is 30K Met-tons? Well lets compare it the second most popular bullion vehicle ever produced; the Silver American eagle. There have been 10474.4 metric tons of those minted. Assuming no attrition (melting or loss) this still places the all high and mighty ASE at a 1:3 ratio once to ounce in relation to 90%.
Time out for review:
-There is a bunch of 90%
-Even if half of the 90% ever minted has been melted (which is so ridiculous I'm ashamed that I typed it) there is still a bunch of it.
-So much of it that ASEs to 90% = 1:3
-At this rate If you can wait another 60+ years ASEs will be as common (per ounce) as 90%.
paymehigher wrote:So do you think it would be good to invest a small portion of your stack into numi 90% silver coins? Thanks guys, lots of great information here.
68Camaro wrote:I'm with Ray on this, not that it is critical. I was going to comment last night but i was just too tired to post then. Recycle coin silver has been sucked into supply for 40 years, and while there is still "a lot" left relative to what was minted, I'd be shocked if it was more than 20% of original, and I was going to guess it at more like the 10% number that Ray threw out.
beauanderos wrote:I give it five years, maximum... before PM's "reset." The dollar will be dead by then.
Rodebaugh wrote:Nice to see you take the bait Ray. I knew my post would illicit your response. It's a nice added bonus to get Rich on board as well as he is another member of whom I hold in high regard.
Fellas don't take offense, but please allow me to continue to play the antagonist on this one in a effort to explore the subject further.
Another thing to think about: The US Mint did not stop producing 90% in 1964, they only slowed it.
I'm at the office using the boss's computer and I don't have access to excel to help extrapolate Mint/Proof Set 90% coinage into hard figures for comparison but I am sure that there will be several hundred to a few thousand Metric tons in that pool. Furthermore I would venture to theorize that attrition of that silver pool has been minimal at 10% or less coins lost to smelting.
Furthermore, one must be careful in speaking with any large Midwest coin dealer that states that he routinely sends a monthly $10000 face to the smelt shop. I don't think he is pulling anyone's leg or is acting to deceive you Ray by telling you this. In fact I believe him. However I do not think we should take this statement at face value. The question is this: Does the melt shop actually melt that 90% silver or just wholesale it back out? I have heard two answers on this from the cooks themselves; yes and no. Yes, when silver availability to market through traditional venues is not fulfilling demand. No, this silver is not needed to satisfy current production demands and is in fact far more valuable wholesaled once again to another distributor or it is simply warehoused.
I'd like to hear from our resident Darth Melter aka Market Harmony to see what the typical percentages of Ag types he recycles? I don't need need solid numbers Mike; rough estimates would satisfy my curiosity. Out of 1000tozs of payable scarp how much is flat and stem ware, .999 rounds, 90%, other?
Doc
And if investment grade silver truly is scarcer than gold (this is open to debate) than the day will come when silver hits one to one with gold... and then passes it.
paymehigher wrote:Do you believe that 90% silver will be the first to dry up after the masses realize that the economy is collapsing? <snip>
beauanderos wrote:If your question is will 90% junk silver dry up before other forms... I can ABSOLUTELY guarantee you that it WILL. .999 silver in however many forms is being fabricated now and in the foreseeable future... whereas 90% is no longer produced, and the remaining pool shrinks each day.
The answer gets trickier as to when that happens. I'll leave that for brighter minds than mine... I'm just happy we have this buying opportunity for as long as it lasts.
beauanderos wrote:Gresham's Law will play out in the coming decade. I can't imagine there is a single one among us who doesn't divide their best stuff from their worst.
There will come the day when there is a feeding frenzy to snatch up silver in ANY form, and those who wait too long might have money to convert... but they won't be able to outbid the fanatics on ebay with deeper pockets.
Return to Silver Bullion, Gold, & other Bullion Metals
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 62 guests