timmus0382 wrote:I see that the CME raised futures margins by 11%. What does this mean and can it be considered a way to manipulate the market by pushing out would be investors?
inflationhawk wrote:Or the opposite, pushing out speculators who artificially drive up prices that create bubbles. Raising margin requirements could result in stronger holders of silver in the long term and push out the greedy hedge funds that are just in it for the "action".
Jonflyfish wrote:inflationhawk wrote:Or the opposite, pushing out speculators who artificially drive up prices that create bubbles. Raising margin requirements could result in stronger holders of silver in the long term and push out the greedy hedge funds that are just in it for the "action".
Please explain how "speculators" artificially drive up prices. Also, how is one who buys all they can and holds physical silver is not "greedy" but investment professionals somehow are?
I've been trading since 1993 and have yet to learn how speculators as a collective body have, by committee, chosen to determine any price level in any market.
I remember when Obama campaigned on this idea that somehow "speculators" should be prosecuted for somehow collectively deciding crude oil should be $147. Afterwords, who was the nice charity group that decided to lower crude by > $100 thereafter? LOL
whatsnext wrote:Jonflyfish wrote:inflationhawk wrote:Or the opposite, pushing out speculators who artificially drive up prices that create bubbles. Raising margin requirements could result in stronger holders of silver in the long term and push out the greedy hedge funds that are just in it for the "action".
Please explain how "speculators" artificially drive up prices. Also, how is one who buys all they can and holds physical silver is not "greedy" but investment professionals somehow are?
I've been trading since 1993 and have yet to learn how speculators as a collective body have, by committee, chosen to determine any price level in any market.
I remember when Obama campaigned on this idea that somehow "speculators" should be prosecuted for somehow collectively deciding crude oil should be $147. Afterwords, who was the nice charity group that decided to lower crude by > $100 thereafter? LOL
My view of speculators is just indivdiual people who see potential for growth and want in on a future profit. There is no committee, just many indivdiual people acting on info.
They just buy and sell high. When enough get in together they force prices up b/c of supply/demand. When they bail it falls.
[/quote]Jonflyfish wrote:
Speculators also buy high and sell low. They also sell short high and cover low, Sell short low and cover high. There is no default collective position bias of "speculators". This helps provide liquidity and transparency in the markets. People are free to take price risk via position exposure.
inflationhawk wrote:Jonflyfish wrote:whatsnext wrote:
Speculators also buy high and sell low. They also sell short high and cover low, Sell short low and cover high. There is no default collective position bias of "speculators". This helps provide liquidity and transparency in the markets. People are free to take price risk via position exposure.
And some short high and cover higher(47.77 on silver maybe?)
Tourney64 wrote:Someone I work with lost $50,000 yesterday on silver futures. These greedy investors can also be stupid losers.
30 day advance notice on a policy change would not be considered manipulative. Announcing a policy change after the markets close at 4pm and effective at the start of the next day is extremely manipulative. Don't mess or try to cut in in the action of those in power or you will get burnt.
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