TitusFable wrote: the government can seize your assets. The same is true with PM.
Recyclersteve wrote:In a bit of a squeamish type application, even catheters often have silver coatings on them. I'd rather have a silver coated one made domestically than one made in China that is coated with God knows what...
There are tons of very important uses for silver, no question about it. But there are two big problems that can keep silver down for a long time:
1) Since silver is typically mined as a byproduct of zinc, lead, copper or gold, the cost associated with the silver is often calculated as zero (literally), so miners can and do sell silver at prices way below what you might think it costs them.
2) Silver futures- the futures (paper) market is supposed to be something like 100x the size of the physical market. So if someone wants to short silver in a big way, that is how they can do it, assuming of course they have the resources to do so.
My guess on what could turn silver around- a large manufacturer (think Ford, DowDuPont, an Apple supplier, etc.) comes out and says they are having a hard time getting silver and may have to shut down production on a key item if conditions don't improve quickly. Or, if they say something like "We have recently procured a stockpile of $50 million in silver to help take us though these conditions without product interruptions." Then, if a second company (maybe in a different industry) said something similar, silver could have a rally that could be quite memorable.
My 2nd guess on what could turn silver around- let's say that some well-known wealthy person is on national TV and says something about they and a bunch of buddies getting together to corner the silver market (a la the Hunt Bros. in the late 70's and 1980). But this one is different because this group is NOT using margin like the Hunt Bros. did. Also, they are all living outside the U.S. and our government couldn't really confiscate their holdings. Who would have the guts to do this? Just speculating, but here are a few names/investor types that come to mind- A Russian oligarch, perhaps. Maybe someone like Kevin O'Leary or Eric Sprott of Canada. Jim Rogers of Singapore. Julian Robertson, who lives in the U.S. but also has a residence in New Zealand. There are quite a few possibilities.
Recyclersteve wrote:With all due respect, the Dow only has to go another roughly 1% from where it has already been recently to hit 27k. Therefore, 27k is not a bold prediction. Now if you said it will only go up another 1% (and no further) without a big pullback (let's say 10% or more), that would be a very bold call.
In terms of seasonality, the best time of year for the markets normally begins around mid-October (with earnings season). The worst time of the year (August to roughly mid-October) is just about to end. This is per the Stock Trader's Almanac. Obviously, seasonality is just about playing percentages. It doesn't work that way every year.
Recyclersteve wrote:But what percent of a pullback are you looking for?
68Camaro wrote:Yep treetop - a correction (which is normal after a run up) isn't necessarily the big crash.
And everything - the behavior of your former gf may define a new paradigm of characteristics that is what causes the markets to ultimately fail. When enough of the population just presumes that debt no longer matters - can be run up to infinite levels without needing to pay it back, with no accountability and the government covers for them - then truly what do we have left? I was so pissed at the attitude of tens of millions in the 2008 crisis who just walked away from their debt. I started then to fear that we had become unrecognizable to our forefathers. That may have just been the start of it.
Cu Penny Hoarder wrote:everything wrote:Certainly. When everyone is maxed out, banks could pull back anytime. But why would they?, they are banking interest bonuses, flush with borrowing power, golden parachutes set, and they got bailed out last time, they know it's a free ride now. As long as equities are growing more than the cost to borrow that money which is a pittance, this bull run will go on for many more years. Large investors and parabolic government spending driving it, they have the connections, well .. greed is driving it but that's just the way it goes. Is it borderline corruption, more or less. Is it foolish, sure, but it's the way our economies roll now. Booms and busts, and throw away society. As long as your not exposed to market forces when the music stops your fine. And, all the debtors will be rewarded anyway, inflation will eat up some of the balance, and rates will be zero again, maybe even less than zero, the banks would rather refinance you at a super low rate than have the debt written off. It's really great if you know how to play it. And, hedging is so in these days, look at the central banks, they have gold buying policies like we have never seen before, they know how this will play out, probably like it always has. Spend until you can't, create new financial instruments to spend again, etc. rinse / repeat.
Cu Penny Hoarder wrote:[
All possible, but I feel the main reason Ag will take off will be a lack of confidence in the financial system i.e. a 'run to safety'. This will happen when the USD begins to fail (or is replaced by another currency) and/or another financial crisis, which I believe is right around the corner. Reasons why I believe this are:
- Real inflation is 6-8% a year and wages are not keeping up.
- Job market improving slightly, but these are mostly low wage jobs.
- Interest rates are rising.
- The housing market is in a bubble. The air is starting to come out now, mainly due to price fatigue and rising interest rates.
- The stock market is extremely overvalued. However I believe DOW 27,000 and S&P 3000 will be achieved before it collapses.
- Every millennial I know that has a college degree is loaded up with 50-100K student loan debt.
- Auto loan defaults are increasing.
Prepare accordingly.
Cu Penny Hoarder wrote:Cu Penny Hoarder wrote:[
All possible, but I feel the main reason Ag will take off will be a lack of confidence in the financial system i.e. a 'run to safety'. This will happen when the USD begins to fail (or is replaced by another currency) and/or another financial crisis, which I believe is right around the corner. Reasons why I believe this are:
- Real inflation is 6-8% a year and wages are not keeping up.
- Job market improving slightly, but these are mostly low wage jobs.
- Interest rates are rising.
- The housing market is in a bubble. The air is starting to come out now, mainly due to price fatigue and rising interest rates.
- The stock market is extremely overvalued. However I believe DOW 27,000 and S&P 3000 will be achieved before it collapses.
- Every millennial I know that has a college degree is loaded up with 50-100K student loan debt.
- Auto loan defaults are increasing.
Prepare accordingly.
Interesting 2 days. Dow down -831 yesterday and -545 today. Is this the start of the BIG one or is it just a correction? Only time will tell.
Recyclersteve wrote:
Of course nobody knows for sure, but I personally think it is just a pullback. Whether you believe the numbers or not, the economy is doing too well for people to really panic IMHO. I hesitate to use the term correction because we haven't gone down 10% as yet.
Cu Penny Hoarder wrote: Government numbers are manipulated to make things look better than they really are. They conveniently leave out the cost of food, energy and tuition when calculating inflation. Also, the unemployment numbers are a joke. I guess if you lie over and over again, people start to believe it.
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