68Camaro wrote:Good luck to you all that are waiting. While a paper dump will happen, the amount of physical that will be available will be limited in both size and duration.
68Camaro wrote:Good luck to you all that are waiting. While a paper dump will happen, the amount of physical that will be available will be limited in both size and duration.
TwoPenniesEarned wrote:68Camaro wrote:Good luck to you all that are waiting. While a paper dump will happen, the amount of physical that will be available will be limited in both size and duration.
This has not been the case for the prior price dumps. While I recognize that because something has happened again and again (physical being available on price dumps) that it might not again, I'm pretty confident that TPTB will hold things together enough to make the necessary deliveries. Some of us will bail out at the bottom and supply just enough to give the naked shorts the appearance of having clothes. And then it will be all over and the shorts will be long.
I do not believe we will have a supply crunch.
I used to. But I don't any more. I give the central banks credit for holding the Ponzi together and enriching themselves at the same time...what more can you say. They succeeded. Most people just don't realize that this success will be their eventual doom.
Oh well...Silver will never be worth nothing. And I personally feel it is indeed undervalued. I just don't believe we will have constrained supply given history.
In 1995, 22 gold deposits with at least two million ounces of gold each were discovered, according to SNL Metals Economics Group. In 2010 there were six such discoveries, and in 2011 there was one. In 2012: nothing.
- Kelsey Campbell-Dollaghan, May 21, 2014
theo wrote:Good see you posting again Inflexion.
I tend to think the first to experience a noticeable shortage will be silver, though I have no idea when. At these prices it is the market is very small at 30 billion (as others have said), which is a little less than the GDP of Vietnam. However, the industrial demand is significant and mostly stable, while its supply tends to be inelastic as it is mostly dependent on the mining of other metals such as gold and copper (meaning higher prices will not necessarily bring in more mining supply). Even though the MSM and TPTB have done everything possible to discredit silver as a viable investment, the U.S. mint is on track for another record year of SAE sales. The physical investment community is made of small (yet strong) hands who hold anywhere between several hundred to several thousand ounces who are unlikely to sell at these prices.
Gold IMO is far more controllable since a large percentage of it is held by central banks. Any default between bankers will be (and probably have been) covered up since everybody knows any public failure to deliver will threaten the entire system.; Germany being the prime example. Also the lower industrial demand is far easier to satisfy.
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