NO Dragons at Retails Stores in Sydney

Matthew 26:14 said:
There are 300,000 of these 2012 dragons out there. Once the large bullion houses in the US begin to release them the price should settle around $60 a coin I would think. The REAL problem would be if there's an attempt to manipulate supply by the Perth Mint dealers by sitting on thousands of these coins to artificially restrict supply and therefore maintaining an artificial price.

In share trading this is what "boiler rooms" tend to do or those who are trying to "pump and dump" a particular share. ie. The bullion dealers only release say 100,000 of the coins over the first month allowing a secondary market to trade. Because supply is so limited, the secondary market will exhibit prices like $100 a coin. Then the bullion houses will try to sell 1,000 coins or so a time at $100 a coin and suckers believe that's the going rate because that's what they've seen in the secondary markets.

BUT as thousands more of the coins enter the market, the price will drop. This is exactly how you pump and dump a share - the key is, you dont want to be the dealer sitting on a large supply (investment exposure) when the music stops and all the other dealers have cashed out pushing the prices lower.

Very well said.

1for1
 
Dealers cannot afford to sit on thousands of ounces to speculate on premium increases. It's all about the velocity of cash-flow - why sit on a coin for months hoping it goes up $20-30 when you can simply sell and make a few dollars, and rinse/repeat.

Holding is the game of the end consumer.
 
Matthew 26:14 said:
There are 300,000 of these 2012 dragons out there. Once the large bullion houses in the US begin to release them the price should settle around $60 a coin I would think. The REAL problem would be if there's an attempt to manipulate supply by the Perth Mint dealers by sitting on thousands of these coins to artificially restrict supply and therefore maintaining an artificial price.

In share trading this is what "boiler rooms" tend to do or those who are trying to "pump and dump" a particular share. ie. The bullion dealers only release say 100,000 of the coins over the first month allowing a secondary market to trade. Because supply is so limited, the secondary market will exhibit prices like $100 a coin. Then the bullion houses will try to sell 1,000 coins or so a time at $100 a coin and suckers believe that's the going rate because that's what they've seen in the secondary markets.

BUT as thousands more of the coins enter the market, the price will drop. This is exactly how you pump and dump a share - the key is, you dont want to be the dealer sitting on a large supply (investment exposure) when the music stops and all the other dealers have cashed out pushing the prices lower.

I understand the theory but don't believe it applies in this situation. You assume that dumping thousands of coins onto the market is going to all of a sudden mean that there is an excess of supply. This is not the case - the demand will soak up that supply very quickly. We heard this morning (whether to believe it or not is another matter) that there was interest for over 2,000,000 of the silver 1 oz rounds. Dumping tens of thousands of coins into that demand won't even make a dent. Demand will stay high and prices will stay high to match IMO.
 
goldpelican said:
Dealers cannot afford to sit on thousands of ounces to speculate on premium increases. It's all about the velocity of cash-flow - why sit on a coin for months hoping it goes up $20-30 when you can simply sell and make a few dollars, and rinse/repeat.

Holding is the game of the end consumer.

Are you sure about that? There are at least two different types of dealers, the ones who probably depend on velocity and move stock fast (like BB) and the ones that rely on amazing markups and profit margins while having thin volume.

I cannot fathom how for example, "$90/oz" will have a high amount of velocity.

All speculation of course but I wouldn't put it past some dealers to do exactly what Matthew speculates.

After all, $10k set aside on 200oz dragons isn't all that much. Wait a few months and bam, massive profits.
 
fishball said:
goldpelican said:
Dealers cannot afford to sit on thousands of ounces to speculate on premium increases. It's all about the velocity of cash-flow - why sit on a coin for months hoping it goes up $20-30 when you can simply sell and make a few dollars, and rinse/repeat.

Holding is the game of the end consumer.

Are you sure about that? There are at least two different types of dealers, the ones who probably depend on velocity and move stock fast (like BB) and the ones that rely on amazing markups and profit margins while having thin volume.

I cannot fathom how for example, "$90/oz" will have a high amount of velocity.

All speculation of course but I wouldn't put it past some dealers to do exactly what Matthew speculates.

After all, $10k set aside on 200oz dragons isn't all that much. Wait a few months and bam, massive profits.

Agreed. Well deducted and never straying from the same reality im experiencing.

1for1
 
I agree with fishball, Tulving has stated in an interview that he will hold gold unhedged, if he believes the price will rise.
 
goldpelican said:
Dealers cannot afford to sit on thousands of ounces to speculate on premium increases. It's all about the velocity of cash-flow - why sit on a coin for months hoping it goes up $20-30 when you can simply sell and make a few dollars, and rinse/repeat.

Holding is the game of the end consumer.

In the normal course of events I agree. But if you take a large US dealer, the 1oz Dragons might represent just 1% of their entire stock. Given the rarity of this dragon mania event on demand surrounding its release, it might be worth for such a dealer to sit on a substantial amount of coins although to the dealer this "substantial amount" might only be 1% of their entire silver holdings.

So they would go on trading 99% of their other stock as per usual to generate cash flow but take a punt on holding just 1% of their stock (1oz dragons) as a bit of a speculative investment in their portfolio of metals.
 
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