Source: Kitco
Take a look at what happened in late 2008, right about the time when DJIA (Dow Jones Industrial Average) was dropping ~700 points a day.
"A rising tides lifts all ships."
"A ebbing tide tide lowers all ships."
Flawed metaphor maybe, but still holds a grain of truth.
The global "stock+options+derivatives" markets is the largest known pool of capital (except maybe sovereign bonds).
Abrupt shock devaluations, like stock market crashes, are deflationary. Deflation=decrease in currency supply, antonym of inflation
Also don't forget that other than its role as a monetary metal, silver is traded as a commodity like WTI/Brent crude oil, copper or soy beans.
Large volumes of commodities, as futures contracts and other derivatives, are traded on leverage with margin loans.
When credit tightens (which they do during stock crashes), commodity positions are liquidated. Also bearish for silver price in the immediate short term.
Here's the kicker, these are broad stroke generalizations, all the factors interact with each other, nothing stays still. Throw in psychology of human motivation and crowd behavior.
The complexity is mind-boggling.
So when it comes to economics or market behavior, I don't pretend to know nothing. I
understand that 'I know nothing'.
Don't let anybody fool you otherwise, no Nobel laureate, no hedge fund, no elected politician, no reserve bank officials, actually understands 100% how an economy works.
I doubt even the Top 0.01% have a complete picture beyond their own patch.