Bill,
I belong to a couple of different online forums (Realcent, BullionStackers) upon which I have noticed
sentiment beginning to degrade rapidly. On some of the threads on SilverDoctors there are members
bemoaning all the money they've lost since they were duped into stacking by the gurus, whom they go
on to lambast unmercifully.
However, I've said it before and I'll say it again. Statistical analysis is worthless in a fixed market, one in
which those who push the prices around can just as easily read resistance and support levels, and do what
is necessary to violate those levels with unimaginable ferocity, thereby demoralizing the few remaining
stalwart strong hands during what has been a three year campaign of razing the structures of resistance to
the ground, pillaging the profits of the miners, and looting the wallets and portfolios of those insightful
enough to take meaningful measures to protect their depreciating purchasing power by taking physical
possession of precious metals.
I've been asked by fellow members when I think the manipulation will stop, and to what levels prices might
sink. Along with others, my view is that only the exhaustion of above ground physical supplies of silver and
gold, having been siphoned away by China, et al, will cause the price suppression to stop.
On the one hand, for those who continue to stack, inured to the slings and arrows of manipulation by their
prescience to see beyond the machinations and understand the true worth of the metals... these schemes
provide for an ongoing sale of items that should be multiples higher than they are at present.
On the other hand, who is being harmed by these actions? Certainly, those with short term horizons, who had
been looking for quick paper profits. And also those who perhaps are nearing retirement or have already done so,
having hoped to have supplemented their days of leisure by selling off a bit from time to time to finance expenses.
As well as the miners and their shareholders.
But also... the American public. It costs little, mere billions, to direct spot prices (and thus sentiment) where
they want it to go. What is a few billion when you can just push buttons to create more? It wouldn't surprise me
in the least to learn someday that some of the QE had been diverted from its stated purposes, earmarked instead
to decimate the morale of those who would unseat the almighty dollar.
And how does it cost the public? They are indirectly, certainly unwittingly, abetting the purposes of that circle of
shadowy elite by subsidizing the cost of doing so... via inflation. Either by restoring the bullion banks to health, via
bailouts (or soon to come bail-ins) should they be placed in jeopardy and incurr losses by rigging the games at the
direction of the usual suspects, or simply by Central Banks directly intervening in the markets (as the CME has recently
coaxed them to do)... the end result will be greater inflation, a policy that will be implemented to the extreme... until
it is too late to turn back and hyperinflation ensues.
Regards,
Ray Long
thanks as always for your tireless writing.