TreasureHunter
Well-Known Member
In 2011-2012, I remember a simple 1 oz silver coin cost above 45 $ at dealers (above spot).
Stackers were rushing madly, buying it like hot delicious donuts believing "it will go to the Moon".
Buying panic.
Buy at 45 $ before it hits 50 $!
Buy buy buy... it can get to 75 $.
Now it can barely hold 15 $ and we're expecting it to fall lower to 10 $.
:/
Some said the US debt "will reach" 14 billion $. Well, it did. They said the economy will implode and the dollar will crash. Well, that hasn't happened.
Instead: http://www.usdebtclock.org now shows 18.4 billion $ debt. And they even launched an iPhone app.
(I don't know how they get the numbers running "live" - I don't know).
Silver's and gold's graphs are eerily similar to Bitcoin's graph (after the crash). The typical asset bubble.
Those who invested a lot into PM's can only "hope" the same thing happens to fiat money and gold and silver prices make the "inverse move" up.

Stackers were rushing madly, buying it like hot delicious donuts believing "it will go to the Moon".
Buying panic.
Buy at 45 $ before it hits 50 $!
Buy buy buy... it can get to 75 $.
Now it can barely hold 15 $ and we're expecting it to fall lower to 10 $.
:/
Some said the US debt "will reach" 14 billion $. Well, it did. They said the economy will implode and the dollar will crash. Well, that hasn't happened.
Instead: http://www.usdebtclock.org now shows 18.4 billion $ debt. And they even launched an iPhone app.
(I don't know how they get the numbers running "live" - I don't know).
Silver's and gold's graphs are eerily similar to Bitcoin's graph (after the crash). The typical asset bubble.
Those who invested a lot into PM's can only "hope" the same thing happens to fiat money and gold and silver prices make the "inverse move" up.