Jonflyfish wrote:Not too overly concerned about the short to intermediate prospects, even surpassing the recent highs.
Long term, I would not be surprised to see silver dipping into the low to mid teens, or even single digits.
I know this won't be very popular here. My apologies in advance. Not trying to stir the pot nor debate the issue.
Everyone has their views and opinions I respect that. The next economic dip can be far deeper than the last and assets will be sold even deeper.
BRIC countries may very well pop and hemorrhage even worse. USD may become a very scarce resource in such an environment.
QE2 is almost done and the Fed will have a difficult time trying to re capitalize the additional asset losses that are coming.
Real estate has suffered terribly and will continue to decline. The QE bubbles have not been enough. The so-called economic recovery has not made it to a self-sustaining level.
Job growth is still meaningless and many are still scraping by. Without more QE, which will be very difficult to engineer, esp with the fiscal budget mess, the artificial asset recovery scheme will unravel.
People keep talking about all the inflation that is to come. I think we have seen what we are going to see for a while. Much later, we will see the massive inflation. Inflation requires money to be floating around in the system with economic expansion (even if incomes grow slower than prices). An economy needs more money chasing fewer goods.
As it is, people have less money and fewer jobs. There is no effective catalyst working to reverse that at this time. Velocity of money keeps going backwards and base money keeps shrinking. It doesn't matter if the fed taps a few keys and says your favorite bank now has an extra $quadrillion in excess reserves. You still have no more cash. With a continued declining housing market, QE pumped up markets winding down, the negative feedback loop will regain a strong footing and base money will shrink even more as the fractional reserve note valuations vanish due to continued loan defaults and property foreclosures. Wealth and base money destruction. It would be no surprise to see 10 yr treasury notes rally to the point where yields drop to 2%.
Cheers
Jonflyfish wrote:Not too overly concerned about the short to intermediate prospects, even surpassing the recent highs.
Long term, I would not be surprised to see silver dipping into the low to mid teens, or even single digits.
I know this won't be very popular here. My apologies in advance. Not trying to stir the pot nor debate the issue.
Everyone has their views and opinions I respect that. The next economic dip can be far deeper than the last and assets will be sold even deeper.
BRIC countries may very well pop and hemorrhage even worse. USD may become a very scarce resource in such an environment.
QE2 is almost done and the Fed will have a difficult time trying to re capitalize the additional asset losses that are coming.
Real estate has suffered terribly and will continue to decline. The QE bubbles have not been enough. The so-called economic recovery has not made it to a self-sustaining level.
Job growth is still meaningless and many are still scraping by. Without more QE, which will be very difficult to engineer, esp with the fiscal budget mess, the artificial asset recovery scheme will unravel.
People keep talking about all the inflation that is to come. I think we have seen what we are going to see for a while. Much later, we will see the massive inflation. Inflation requires money to be floating around in the system with economic expansion (even if incomes grow slower than prices). An economy needs more money chasing fewer goods.
As it is, people have less money and fewer jobs. There is no effective catalyst working to reverse that at this time. Velocity of money keeps going backwards and base money keeps shrinking. It doesn't matter if the fed taps a few keys and says your favorite bank now has an extra $quadrillion in excess reserves. You still have no more cash. With a continued declining housing market, QE pumped up markets winding down, the negative feedback loop will regain a strong footing and base money will shrink even more as the fractional reserve note valuations vanish due to continued loan defaults and property foreclosures. Wealth and base money destruction. It would be no surprise to see 10 yr treasury notes rally to the point where yields drop to 2%.
Cheers
slickeast wrote:Single digit silver? Bring it on. I will buy as much as I can. We saw it in 2008. Bought some. Not as much as I should have, but I was new to the game. less than 3 years later we saw $48. Could have sold at 5x what I paid. Think about it. $100,000 of silver at $10/oz. from nwtm would have yielded $500,000 just a few weeks ago. I think that is a great return. We don't know what the future holds. If we play our cards right buying the dips and selling the spikes we should be able to make money along the way.
I'd be cussen up a storm. Not because the PM's I have lost value, but for how much I could have bought had I waited.Jonflyfish wrote:Not too overly concerned about the short to intermediate prospects, even surpassing the recent highs.
Long term, I would not be surprised to see silver dipping into the low to mid teens, or even single digits.
Sheikh_yer_Bu'Tay wrote:slickeast wrote:Single digit silver? Bring it on. I will buy as much as I can. We saw it in 2008. Bought some. Not as much as I should have, but I was new to the game. less than 3 years later we saw $48. Could have sold at 5x what I paid. Think about it. $100,000 of silver at $10/oz. from nwtm would have yielded $500,000 just a few weeks ago. I think that is a great return. We don't know what the future holds. If we play our cards right buying the dips and selling the spikes we should be able to make money along the way.
Even at the lowest of the dip in 2008, no coin shop in my town would sell to me at spot. Not even close. The best deals I got were $17.00 per ozt when spot had come back up to $12.00. That was okay. I was happy to buy. I sold 100 ozt at the peak, so I more than doubled my money buying at $17.
Jonflyfish wrote:People talk about "If silver ever gets back to x or xx I'll buy it all." No doubt some will. I'm sure some said the same thing during the Hunt bro's era during the similar peak of delusional euphoria.
Of course people will say "but this time it's different". Well yes it is and no it isn't. The stories to drive investor psychology are different but the behavior is infallibly and cyclically the same.
Cheers
Jonflyfish wrote:What IS occurring is that there is a SHORTAGE of USD in people's wallets/accounts.
68Camaro wrote:Some good observations there mixed in with some stuff I don't trust... I think game over could well be true for China, at least short-term, which is where the title of the article came from. And the ripples that come off that will go far and wide. The analogy of modern China to the US of the late 20s was thought-provoking.
An edit - a major BS-alert item I noted in the article, which I keep seeing repeated the blogs of other with similar opinions, is that no one is borrowing. That's a redirection of the truth (i.e. a lie). That, and the reference to Keynes, are red flags to the bottom line conclusion in this. What is really happening is that both individuals and small businesses - those with impeccable credit - are desperate to borrow. The banks have gone full circle from being outrageously irresponsible in their lending, to choosing to make it outrageously difficult to borrow. In this cycle they can keep their Fed dollars and play with them. They've been successful in making money either way, and they will continue to game the system so that they always come out on top. It's like a casino, with house rules. {having trouble spelling this early in the morning}
It seems the Fed has (or thinks it has) perfected monetary practice over the past 60+ years, and fears deflation more than inflation...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:US_Hi ... ncient.svg
This even though the banks can make money either way.
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