68Camaro wrote:
You only lose money if you sell. Silver (and gold) is money. USD are popular only until they aren't. The conversion price between USD and PM is artificial and based on games being played at high levels. You should not be storing assets in PM until/unless (to the best of ability) you have basic needs covered for an extended period of time, and then you should be focused more on ounces for long term hold. If however you are flipping then you are playing with the big boys and you take the bad with the good.
Recyclersteve wrote:68Camaro wrote:
You only lose money if you sell. Silver (and gold) is money. USD are popular only until they aren't. The conversion price between USD and PM is artificial and based on games being played at high levels. You should not be storing assets in PM until/unless (to the best of ability) you have basic needs covered for an extended period of time, and then you should be focused more on ounces for long term hold. If however you are flipping then you are playing with the big boys and you take the bad with the good.
I agree- you only lose when you sell. Unfortunately, some people get too emotional with their holdings and get scared out at the wrong time. I do like what you are saying here...
Country wrote:The problem of how long you CAN you wait is related to age. If you're younger, you can wait it out a generation. If you are in your late '60s (like me), waiting may not be an option. What if we wait like we did from 1980- 2011 again? I did that! But, I don't have time left to do that again, and I see similarities: falling PMs and equities that go much higher than anyone dreamed. Could it go on for decades again? Why not DOW 100,000 in 2031, and AG languishing at $10 during that same timespan? I know the fundamentals are different now, but it may be possible that the criminals continue their game another generation.
Country wrote:The problem of how long you CAN you wait is related to age. If you're younger, you can wait it out a generation. If you are in your late '60s (like me), waiting may not be an option. What if we wait like we did from 1980- 2011 again? I did that! But, I don't have time left to do that again, and I see similarities: falling PMs and equities that go much higher than anyone dreamed. Could it go on for decades again? Why not DOW 100,000 in 2031, and AG languishing at $10 during that same timespan? I know the fundamentals are different now, but it may be possible that the criminals continue their game another generation.
silverflake wrote:I see in this thread some of you good folks saying that silver could go down further (it could) and some one mentioned a "what if" scenario about stocks continuing higher while silver wallows at $10/ounce. Lets consider this though: even if we stackers all threw in the towel, there has to be a price point where miners can no longer produce silver because the cost is too much higher than the value. I mean, it still needs to be produced for electronics and solar and anti-microbials etc. The question is, what Is that ultimate low price level? I have no idea. I would imagine it can't be too far below where we are now but I am not qualified to answer that.
Thoughts?
Anyhow, I am going to keep stacking. I still think you all should too.
silverflake wrote:I see in this thread some of you good folks saying that silver could go down further (it could) and some one mentioned a "what if" scenario about stocks continuing higher while silver wallows at $10/ounce. Lets consider this though: even if we stackers all threw in the towel, there has to be a price point where miners can no longer produce silver because the cost is too much higher than the value. I mean, it still needs to be produced for electronics and solar and anti-microbials etc. The question is, what Is that ultimate low price level? I have no idea. I would imagine it can't be too far below where we are now but I am not qualified to answer that.
Thoughts?
Anyhow, I am going to keep stacking. I still think you all should too.
68Camaro wrote:Complex problems have simple, easy to understand, wrong answers.
But I will note that the largest highest grade mines have been playing out over time, and the last time silver was $4 (about 2002) the Dow was about half of now at a time when silver was arguably undervalued and the world was still burning through its billions of ounces of historical reserves held in silver coinage (now mostly depleted). There may be more to it than that, but I think a lot of the answer lies in those four factors.
silverflake wrote:Oh guys, I remember when silver was $4 an ounce. Early nineties. I was basically broke but could occasionally scrape together $35 to buy a ROLL OF WALKING LIBERTY HALVES! Sweet....$5 silver eagles and maple leafs, sigh, those were the days.
Ok, I'm in, bring on $4 silver. I will take out a second stinkin' mortgage and buy it. '
Pile it up boys. Stack now, stack often.
If that's the answer than why was silver at one point at $4 an ounce? I don't know I'm just asking. Miners were still mining and silver was still be used industrially.
NiBullionCu wrote:If that's the answer than why was silver at one point at $4 an ounce? I don't know I'm just asking. Miners were still mining and silver was still be used industrially.
Short simplistic answer is that most mined silver is produced as a by-product of the primary mine ore, such as copper or zinc. So for those primary copper and zinc mines the silver comes 'free'. For those mines it's 'found' money from their waste stream.
pennypicker wrote:It wasn't that many years ago that my LCS would let me cherry pick his trays of average circulated Peace dollars for $14 and pre-21 Morgans for $15. I long for those days to return and if they do I won't hit those trays easy like before, it instead will be a weekly frontal assault with no mercy given and no names taken
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