Is Silver screwed?

bsylvest said:
It almost seems to be that a large number of "stackers" act almost as though their sheer enthusiasm and determination will somehow manifest higher silver prices, which is extremely disheartening as someone with a moderate silver position.

So, if you're NOT one of those people who seemingly thinks that if they believe hard enough, silver will rise, could you answer me this: How does silver have a future?

Most PM bugs see economic collapse(s) in the semi-near future, and I'm inclined to agree. However, how can you possibly get around the fact that silver got hammered in the GFC, and got hammered over the past seven days as severe worry hit the markets.

Isn't this *extremely* bearish? When there really is a big collapse, why would this suddenly be different to previous times? Why won't it get hammered even more than before?

I really don't see how so many of you can be so overwhelmingly confident in higher future silver prices.

At this stage, I see no other option than to sell as soon as I can break even, if such an oppurtunity presents itself.



What you don't seem to acknowledge is that the dive of recent weeks was caused simply by Rothschild & The Fed ordering JPM, Citi, HSBC etc to dump massive amounts of PAPER pm's onto the market to protect their illegal shorts (which as you should know are already subject to RICO charges - HSBC are currently under a Tolling Agreement with the prosecutors & complainants - you should go look up the implications of that).

The paper pm's released at low prices were subsequently re ought by the same sellers... are you THAT blind???

Posts like this just serve to remind me of why I'm a silver fan... Sorry, but you need to wise-up brother.

VRS ;)x
 
Come on guys we have had him on for long enough :lol:

"YES SILVER IS SCREWED!!"


Post answered

REDBACK
 
VRS said:
bsylvest said:
It almost seems to be that a large number of "stackers" act almost as though their sheer enthusiasm and determination will somehow manifest higher silver prices, which is extremely disheartening as someone with a moderate silver position.

So, if you're NOT one of those people who seemingly thinks that if they believe hard enough, silver will rise, could you answer me this: How does silver have a future?

Most PM bugs see economic collapse(s) in the semi-near future, and I'm inclined to agree. However, how can you possibly get around the fact that silver got hammered in the GFC, and got hammered over the past seven days as severe worry hit the markets.

Isn't this *extremely* bearish? When there really is a big collapse, why would this suddenly be different to previous times? Why won't it get hammered even more than before?

I really don't see how so many of you can be so overwhelmingly confident in higher future silver prices.

At this stage, I see no other option than to sell as soon as I can break even, if such an oppurtunity presents itself.



What you don't seem to acknowledge is that the dive of recent weeks was caused simply by Rothschild & The Fed ordering JPM, Citi, HSBC etc to dump massive amounts of PAPER pm's onto the market to protect their illegal shorts (which as you should know are already subject to RICO charges - HSBC are currently under a Tolling Agreement with the prosecutors & complainants - you should go look up the implications of that).

The paper pm's released at low prices were subsequently re ought by the same sellers... are you THAT blind???

Posts like this just serve to remind me of why I'm a silver fan... Sorry, but you need to wise-up brother.

VRS ;)x

Now now... none of that pragmatism from somebody so NEW here!! You gotta act dumb for as long as possible mate :lol:
 
If Silver is screwed then remember to sell all your soon-to-be-worthless Silver to me. I will pay $8 dollars an ounce so you can enjoy all those Big Mac Meals. Ready to purchase 1850 ounces now. :)
 
VRS first post a ripper :)

bsylvest - for one 'we' are bullish on the decoupling which is starting to take place between the paper market and physical...this spot figure doesn't really mean squat to me personally - it just how much labour or effort I trade this month to the next compared to holding the good stuff...oh and PM me with what your selling :) hate to miss a good bargain
 
"Now now... none of that pragmatism from somebody so NEW here!! You gotta act dumb for as long as possible mate :lol:"

Hahaha! That made me chuckle ;) No, seriously - I've been on the receiving end (or non-receiving end more to the point) of Rothschild's twistedness on several occasions - pension fund business - it's only now I have the luxury of that great rear-view mirror, 'middle age', that I can even consider beginning to take my revenge... and... I WILL have my pound of corporate flesh - but I'm no Shylock... MWAHA-HAH-HAH-HAAAAAAAAAAAAAA!!! ;)x ps - We do not forgive. We do not forget. We are legion...
 
Yippe-Ki-Ya said:
ReturnToZero said:
Yippe-Ki-Ya said:
The AUD is an extemely safe haven at the moment?? :lol:

Er, yes. If my $8 can buy me a big mac meal today and it still can tomorrow, it doesn't matter how much the other currencies appreciate or depreciate. I live in Australia, that's all that matters.

err - that's just the problem! Tomorrow the same big mac costs $8.40 ...

savvvie???

No it doesn't. We don't have hyperinflation, that or I don't know what country you're living.
 
hennypenny wrote:

hi bsylvest

My eyes glazed over trying to read this thread, hopefully i'm not regurgitating others' thoughts.

Anyway, i think:

Many silver investors are bonkers, posters here include paranoid schizophrenics and psychopaths.

Silver is, more likely than not, screwed. If it went to $9 in GFC1 it could go to something sickening like $4 in GFC2, by which point this forum's incessant BTFDers would have more on their minds than silver.

I bought in the mid 20s and didn't bother with that cost averaging stuff (cost averaging is good for catching falling knifes but stupid for catching rising bubbles).

I had the timidity/brains/discipline not to buy over $30. I missed the top but still sold most of my silver months ago for a decent profit. I'm now just left with a dozen kilo coins in a bank's safe deposit box. They might make nice doorstops or paperweights one day.

Anyway, you're feeling bad about your gamble so I suggest you sell maybe a third of your silver now, regardless of your purchase price. (You can at least claim a capital loss.)

The basis for my advice is that from here the price can only go up, go down or stay the same.

If silver goes up, you can be relieved your investment was successful and you still have most of your silver to cash in.

If silver goes down, you can be relieved you sold a fair whack at current higher prices. Plus there's always the option of buying it back.

If silver stays the same, whether you sold or not is immaterial.

Hope that helps, good luck people.

The only person who thanked me for that post 19 months ago was the originator of this thread, bsylvest. I hope he got out - anyone know?

We're $10/oz lower now and my thoughts haven't changed... sorry...

I've owned no silver for a year but do plan to cautiously start buying at $700/kg (assuming it gets that low, and maybe it won't - nobody rings a bell at the top or bottom).
 
hennypenny said:
hennypenny wrote:

hi bsylvest

My eyes glazed over trying to read this thread, hopefully i'm not regurgitating others' thoughts.

Anyway, i think:

Many silver investors are bonkers, posters here include paranoid schizophrenics and psychopaths.

Silver is, more likely than not, screwed. If it went to $9 in GFC1 it could go to something sickening like $4 in GFC2, by which point this forum's incessant BTFDers would have more on their minds than silver.

I bought in the mid 20s and didn't bother with that cost averaging stuff (cost averaging is good for catching falling knifes but stupid for catching rising bubbles).

I had the timidity/brains/discipline not to buy over $30. I missed the top but still sold most of my silver months ago for a decent profit. I'm now just left with a dozen kilo coins in a bank's safe deposit box. They might make nice doorstops or paperweights one day.

Anyway, you're feeling bad about your gamble so I suggest you sell maybe a third of your silver now, regardless of your purchase price. (You can at least claim a capital loss.)

The basis for my advice is that from here the price can only go up, go down or stay the same.

If silver goes up, you can be relieved your investment was successful and you still have most of your silver to cash in.

If silver goes down, you can be relieved you sold a fair whack at current higher prices. Plus there's always the option of buying it back.

If silver stays the same, whether you sold or not is immaterial.

Hope that helps, good luck people.

The only person who thanked me for that post 19 months ago was the originator of this thread, bsylvest. I hope he got out - anyone know?

We're $10/oz lower now and my thoughts haven't changed... sorry...

I've owned no silver for a year but do plan to cautiously start buying at $700/kg (assuming it gets that low, and maybe it won't - nobody rings a bell at the top or bottom).

About $10 to go to start buying those KG's :D
 
By now it became quite clear who was right, didn't it?
Apparently alot managed to 'get out'.
It's that 'getting out' that brought the price down to $20.
Funny how few said they got out, while there must have been plenty, considering the removal of 20 price dollars, which corresponds to alike an entire annual world demand/supply.
I wonder if those that placed those flammatory critics, were among them. Wouldn't surprise me. And those with a big position, tend to sell a chunk, wait for others to buy the price again up, then sell another chunk, and so on. And then they transform from bull to bear, haha.
 
Pirocco said:
By now it became quite clear who was right, didn't it?
Apparently alot managed to 'get out'.
It's that 'getting out' that brought the price down to $20.
Funny how few said they got out, while there must have been plenty, considering the removal of 20 price dollars, which corresponds to alike an entire annual world demand/supply.
I wonder if those that placed those flammatory critics, were among them. Wouldn't surprise me. And those with a big position, tend to sell a chunk, wait for others to buy the price again up, then sell another chunk, and so on. And then they transform from bull to bear, and laugh all the way to the bankhaha.
Fixed
 
wrcmad said:
Pirocco said:
By now it became quite clear who was right, didn't it?
Apparently alot managed to 'get out'.
It's that 'getting out' that brought the price down to $20.
Funny how few said they got out, while there must have been plenty, considering the removal of 20 price dollars, which corresponds to alike an entire annual world demand/supply.
I wonder if those that placed those flammatory critics, were among them. Wouldn't surprise me. And those with a big position, tend to sell a chunk, wait for others to buy the price again up, then sell another chunk, and so on. And then they transform from bull to bear, and laugh all the way to the bank haha.
Fixed.
Sounds like a normal market to me
 
Pirocco said:
By now it became quite clear who was right, didn't it?
Apparently alot managed to 'get out'.
It's that 'getting out' that brought the price down to $20.
Funny how few said they got out, while there must have been plenty, considering the removal of 20 price dollars, which corresponds to alike an entire annual world demand/supply.
I wonder if those that placed those flammatory critics, were among them. Wouldn't surprise me. And those with a big position, tend to sell a chunk, wait for others to buy the price again up, then sell another chunk, and so on. And then they transform from bull to bear, haha.
You still seem to believe that the users of silverstackers.com set the price of silver. It's not Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs, institutional investors, etc., but it's people sitting on a couch in their living room typing while sipping beer (like me for example)? Really?
 
bsylvest said:
Okay main point:

In the event of an economic collapse, do you really think people will buy silver?

Silver got smashed during the GFC, and so people think its going to get smashed again, and so self-fufilling prophecy and all that, silver will get smashed.

I seriously cannot past this.
What are you talking about, price got smashed during the GFC. Lehman Brothers filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection on September 15, 2008. Silver was then at $12.62. In the months that followed there was the fear that the world financial system would collapse, and silver went up to $48 (4 times more!). PM thrives on fear. It is the improving economy that we can expect in the near future which drives the price down.
 
Cheepo said:
Pirocco said:
By now it became quite clear who was right, didn't it?
Apparently alot managed to 'get out'.
It's that 'getting out' that brought the price down to $20.
Funny how few said they got out, while there must have been plenty, considering the removal of 20 price dollars, which corresponds to alike an entire annual world demand/supply.
I wonder if those that placed those flammatory critics, were among them. Wouldn't surprise me. And those with a big position, tend to sell a chunk, wait for others to buy the price again up, then sell another chunk, and so on. And then they transform from bull to bear, haha.
You still seem to believe that the users of silverstackers.com set the price of silver. It's not Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs, institutional investors, etc., but it's people sitting on a couch in their living room typing while sipping beer (like me for example)? Really?
As said enough times: we ALL together drive the silver price. Including Pirocco, Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs and Cheepo.
Do you think nobody here didn't sell since $50? Since $40? Since $30? Since $20?
Do you think some here.... ?
Do you think alot here.... ?
Dwell through the posts, use some keywords and the search function. That's what I did. Not only here.
Look at auction sites. The amount gold/silver for sale. At which price.
I didn't say that YOU think only Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs and institutional investors drive the price.
Why do you say that I think that they, or anyone specific others, do?
I said ALL, and that includes as well people here.
So try to reply on what is said, not to what you made of it.
 
Cheepo said:
bsylvest said:
Okay main point:

In the event of an economic collapse, do you really think people will buy silver?

Silver got smashed during the GFC, and so people think its going to get smashed again, and so self-fufilling prophecy and all that, silver will get smashed.

I seriously cannot past this.
What are you talking about, price got smashed during the GFC. Lehman Brothers filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection on September 15, 2008. Silver was then at $12.62. In the months that followed there was the fear that the world financial system would collapse, and silver went up to $48 (4 times more!). PM thrives on fear. It is the improving economy that we can expect in the near future which drives the price down.
In the months that followed?
You mean, in the years that followed?
It took the silver market people over 3 years to drive the price from $10 to $50.
Together with stocks, and oil, and whatever else out there?
http://finviz.com/futures_charts.ashx?p=w1
The economy DID improve. Recession US, so called 'The Great Recession', is past period, not a present/ongoing period. And silvers price was indeed driven down.
So if one is turning the world upside down, it's you. Or do you live in the past, explaining your 'we can expect'?
 
If people are discussing is silver screwed especially the main stream media, then this is probably the right time to start buying again, the price is going down but the industrial uses for it are increasing so it is still worth investing in. Besides I like coins and trawling through job lots, so that is a hobby side satisfied too.
 
Simon S said:
... the price is going down but the industrial uses for it are increasing so it is still worth investing in.
It would also be interesting to see if yields from mining are steady or decling, and how increasing energy costs for extraction a contributing to the silver price.
 
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