silverprepper999
New Member
the same thing with gold too
trew said:I love how the charts in USD are continually trotted out as if they are relevant to everybody in the world.
There was no $5 silver in AUD. Silver never got down that low. $7 at best and more like $9 most of that time.
In 1985, silver was around $8-$9 AUD. http://www.perthmint.com.au/treasury/silver.csv
trew said:Based on the same logic, house prices should fall back to where they were in 1982 as well
trew said:Cheepo said:Maybe 15 is the new 5, but anything above 15 is still too expensive, in my opinion.
I love how the charts in USD are continually trotted out as if they are relevant to everybody in the world.
There was no $5 silver in AUD. Silver never got down that low. $7 at best and more like $9 most of that time.
In 1985, silver was around $8-$9 AUD. http://www.perthmint.com.au/treasury/silver.csv
In 30 years, silver has gone up 2.5 times and house prices have gone up 10 times.
Obviously houses were a far better investment than silver over that period.
Historically, however, which is currently cheap and which is expensive ?
Worth mentioning is THIS:SilverPete said:I think we need to take into account QE and the extreme expansion of the money supply since 2008. Given the scale of the change in the supply of money, it is valid to argue that the old USD baseline is no longer relevant.TreasureHunter said:Silver's 1985-2014 chart - there's long way down from here
The real question to ask is, what is the new baseline? And are we above or below it?
http://i.imgur.com/Oo0k1gd.png
http://i.imgur.com/IRODsJ7.png
All the figures in that website end in 2010. I would be very curious to know what happened since then. But yes, you are correct. The amount of money is irrelevant. It's the money in circulation that is important. And this obviously hasn't increased, or we would have much higher inflation.Pirocco said:Worth mentioning is THIS:
See, it's not the amount dollars on balances that determines general price risings. It's the amount of these dollars that is spent, that circulates.
And that shows no such big peak, rather the contrary, the monetary base minus the excess reserves is more of a continuation of the pre 2008 trend.
And the EU equivalent case (and probably all worlds central bank cases) is nearly exactly the same.
And why is this? Well, simple: the central banks increased the required reserves together with the excess.
And this explains why prices didn't rise with the balances.
That whole monetary base 'explosion' is just a scam. A scam to trick people like us (they consider us evil speculators that try to evade their fiatcurrency based theft) into wrong decisions that cost us a big enough part of their savings (which are their real problem, they can't rise interest rates due to it). And it worked, I among many others stepped into this scam.
The old USD baseline is still relevant.
It's more complex to draw the post 2010 story, since the Fed ceased the EXCRESNS balance, but it's still possible, I explained it in post #64 in thread "Mundus Argentum" http://forums.silverstackers.com/message-558136.html#p558136Cheepo said:All the figures in that website end in 2010. I would be very curious to know what happened since then. But yes, you are correct. The amount of money is irrelevant. It's the money in circulation that is important. And this obviously hasn't increased, or we would have much higher inflation.
There are two ways to change the velocity, one is the spending, the other is the balance.JB3 said:If velocity goes up, we're headed to hyperinflation.
That linear rise is not some force of nature.JB3 said:I think he's over-differentiating here... Yes, inflation may be dependent on the rate of increase of net base money, but because that is rising linearly we should be seeing an arithmetic rise in prices. The rate of increase of net base money might determine the rate of increase in inflation, but not the change in prices - that's the integration of the inflation - it's a principle of calculus that you have to treat the terms the same on both sides of the equation.
So 1985's $5 might will be today's $15, even with a flat rate of inflation.
TreasureHunter said:It's also possible that it'll hover horizontally for a loooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooong time before spikin' :/
But don't worry, by the time you get 75 years old, silver will reach 100 $ (or higher).
...in the distant future...