Lemon Thrower wrote:if you speak to the president of the company, and he says he has your product in stock, 6 months to ship is not appropriate. nate and MH, are you defending this behavior?
No, if they tell you one thing and do another, that's not right. I was just pointing out that 6 months is in fact normal for NWT. If the president of the company promised a faster turnaround, and didn't follow through, then he is in the wrong. (If he just said the product was available, without specifying a date, then I would assume the normal shipping schedule).
Lemon Thrower wrote:doubling premiums over the weekend or closing up shop is not appropriate in my book. i expect to pay a normal premium for physical but i'm going to avoid Apmex because of their business practices. what apmex did is legal and borderline ethical and i'm sure this is just the beginning of dealers jacking up premiums or taking supply off the market when it suits them. but this is all the more reason to do business with someone else.
I don't see anything inappropriate or unethical about raising prices when demand increases. In fact, I believe that is a
fundamental free market behavior. This whole idea that physical bullion MUST be tied to the COMEX price is laughable. MUST? Says who? A physical chunk of metal in my hands is worth whatever a buyer and I agree upon. The spot price could be $1 or $100, if the buyer and I agree upon a sale at $50, then it's worth $50. The spot price is an indicator of current market activity, it's not a binding price level. If you insist on buying at spot, there is an infinite amount of paper silver available to you. If you want physical, then you have to deal with the free market price for tangible metal, and not worry so much about COMEX contracts.
Lemon Thrower wrote:the reason for my post in the first place was to draw attention to what apmex was doing - closing down shop until comex opened - to highlight this questionable practice and to suggest its the beginning of a trend.
It may be the beginning of a trend, but I hardly find it questionable. If a company charging a higher price than you think they should qualifies as a "questionable practice," then there are an awful lot of questionable companies out there, in all industries.