Seeking Alpha
About this author:

Don’t get me wrong. I love silver. As a very long term investment, you cannot find anything better. If you ignore short and medium term volatility, and simply hold your metal for a long term of years, you will probably do okay. The world is running out of silver. The painful part of this "buy and hold" strategy, however, is in watching prices get periodically clobbered.

Another strategy is to keep a “core” long term portfolio, while, at the same time, keeping a non-core or speculative portfolio. In the speculative portfolio you attempt to profit by buying and selling on the price swings. In both cases, you will buy on the lows, but, instead of just holding for years, you buy low and sell high on a regular basis.

On March 6, 2009, I wrote an article which was titled “Silver Backwardation: Prices About to Soar.” That was the time to buy silver. Now is the time to sell. One of the silver stocks I mentioned was Hecla Mining (HL), and it was selling for $1.27 per share, back then. If you had bought Hecla, at that time, your profit now is immense. Don’t get greedy. Greedy investors who cannot part with their investments often lose money. Silver is now much more likely to go down than up, as I will explain.

Gold is mined primarily in specialized gold mines. It is getting harder and more costly to locate new gold mines. In contrast, 60% of all silver is a byproduct of base metal mines, which are abundant. Another 10% of silver is produced as a byproduct of gold mining. After having been devastated in the wake of the post-Lehman Brothers metals crash, base metals mining has made a remarkable recovery, and has ramped up again, by leaps and bounds. Silver production is up again. If base metal prices go down, again, it will take time before mines start closing again, and for silver production to fall. That means there will be a temporary end to the shortages which culminated in the recent big price rise.

Many people will point to the U.S. dollar and use its inevitable implosion as a reason to buy silver. That is true, in the very long run. However, we will not see high or hyperinflation in America until we have a currency event involving the U.S. dollar. There will be no implosion of the currency, right away, in spite of our irresponsible Federal Reserve. The Fed has certainly set the stage for a catastrophic dollar collapse, but European bank demand for dollars, for purposes of covering debts relating to imploding dollar denominated assets is preventing immediate implosion of the currency itself. This same foreign demand will fuel a dollar rally as soon as the Fed slows down its printing press. All assets, including gold, silver and stocks, have been artificially lifted since last March, by an influx of Fed liquidity (newly printed dollars).

Recently, the Fed's FOMC got a bit of "religion", and promised to stop monetizing Treasury bills. It has also slightly reduced the amount of agency debt it will monetize to $175 billion from $200 billion, and it has announced that it will buy agency bonds over a longer period of time. In addition, the rumor is that they will attempt to drain some of the excess reserves in the next few months. I don't think Bernanke and his minions have the stomach for financial Kaopectate, over a long period of time. But, a lot of the "liquidity" that has been driving Wall Street's rally-party could temporarily dry out. I am sure that when the pain starts monetary diarhhea will return. But, in the meantime, silver could fall very deeply.

Interest rates, like LIBOR, are going to start to rise. Most important to precious metals prices, however, is the fact that the steady stream of funny-money dollars is about to slow down. That, in turn, means that fewer newly printed bucks will be making the journey to Europe. European banks will have fewer dollars to buy for purposes of fulfilling their obligations to American banks, on defaulting dollar based assets. This means more will be paid for the dollars that are still available. All the big banks analysts are saying that the dollar will continue down, and most of the banks that are not connected to the Federal Reserve are short on the dollar. However, it seems to me that the dollar is about to go up dramatically, NOT down, at least in the next few months. While I think this will have a marginal effect on gold, it will probably have a profound effect on silver prices.

Normally, gold and silver prices travel together. I feel that this relationship is going to change very shortly, at least for a while. Sovereign demand can potentially support gold against both artificial price suppression, and its inverse relationship to the dollar. There is no sovereign demand for silver, however, and industrial demand continues to be depressed. I do not believe that investors, alone, in the face of a massive rise in the dollar, will be able to stop it from falling substantially. So, while I believe that gold may drop somewhat from its current record high, silver is going to drop much more in percentage terms, both because it is inherently more volatile, and because new fundamentals will be affecting both metals.

I believe we are about to see some temporary carnage in the stock and commodities markets, and that will deeply affect silver prices. There will be a lot of selling to cover margin calls, for example, over lengthy periods of time. I may be overly pessimistic, but, based on charts I've examined, the way I see things, silver prices could temporarily fall to $11 per troy, again, or even lower, before March 2010. Prognostications as to exact prices, of course, are seldom accurate.

All of this being said, in the very long run, silver will be a good investment, regardless of what happens over the next few months.

DISCLOSURE: Author is long gold. Mostly short silver, but with some long-term "core" long positions.

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This article has 80 comments:

  •  
    Thank you for your thoughtful analysis of short term prospects. Such a sell off would make for attractive entry points.
    Nov 05 07:49 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    The indicator that led you to be bullish on Silver, backwardation, hasn't changed for the better it's gotten more narrow. Yesterday according to Bill Murphy's column at Le Metropole Cafe, "There is only 1 cents of contango in silver NOV/DEC contracts and only 2 cents NOV/JAN contracts. The contango in gold NOV/DEC remained at only $0.6 and $1.2 for NOV/FEB."
    How can that be bearish for Silver? Hmmm!
    Nov 05 08:39 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    How can there be so many stupid people in this world? I will keep trading my USDollar Toilet Paper every chance I can while the STUPID people still accept it. I know what the end game is, and its NOT holding fiat currencies.
    Nov 05 08:44 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Whenever I see an article begin with "don't get me wrong" the caution light glows bright. Same with that subtly manipulative word "clearly" (takk for not using it).

    "Lover of silver", eh? If that's true, then I think your article is a great example of the old phrase, "can't see the forest for the trees".

    Beyond fiat currencies, beyond discerning what's real and what's not (money-wise), besides the fact that they don't call him "Helicopter" for nothing... you did not mention the "elephant in the room": JPMorgan short 190 million ounces of COMEX silver futures.

    There is going to be a High Noon moment before this month is over with CFTC Commissioner Bart Chilton and Chairman Gary Gensler baring their six guns.

    Silver to $11? You're a funny guy, Mr. Goodman. A very funny guy.

    For those wishing to get a better view of the forest, I recommend a visit to the mind of Ted Butler: www.investmentrarities...
    Nov 05 09:15 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    You are ignoring the huge illegal short position of the few concentrated banks which may be just JPM. The move to correct illegal futures manipulations by the SEC could release info at any time that would extend silver & gold much higher. However, the right thing to do would collapse JPM and the treasury will try to prevent that. So only 1/2 way measures will likely be done, but silver is primed for a surprise up move at any time. You guessed it, I follow Ted Butler. You can read him at investmenrarities.com The silver spot trade has been a $16-$18 range and I figure a pop to $18-$20 is the next range before the big bang up. If silver drops as you think, and your points are valid, it is a buying opportunity that won't last long.
    Nov 05 09:25 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    As a holder of physical silver and an investor in a broad collection of miners, You arguments sound plausible to me. I plan to sit tight since I believe the destruction of the U.S. currency lies ahead.
    Nov 05 09:41 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    No faith in what is said by this type of talk.Silver is great but.No matter what happens silver great long term.Why not just come out and say protect yourself with puts or take some off the table.But to jump out with a view that silver will fall 40% or more while also telling us that no matter what happens silver is going to be great going forward.Did he just need to post an article?Then he should have written about something else.Analyst and writers all seem to have a bias that will make them money and to hell with the truth..
    Nov 05 09:55 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Why are the large short positions of the banks "illegal"???


    On Nov 05 09:25 AM EE wrote:

    > You are ignoring the huge illegal short position of the few concentrated
    > banks which may be just JPM. The move to correct illegal futures
    > manipulations by the SEC could release info at any time that would
    > extend silver & gold much higher. However, the right thing to
    > do would collapse JPM and the treasury will try to prevent that.
    > So only 1/2 way measures will likely be done, but silver is primed
    > for a surprise up move at any time. You guessed it, I follow Ted
    > Butler. You can read him at www.investmenrarities.com The
    > silver spot trade has been a $16-$18 range and I figure a pop to
    > $18-$20 is the next range before the big bang up. If silver drops
    > as you think, and your points are valid, it is a buying opportunity
    > that won't last long.
    Nov 05 09:59 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Sounds like 'ole Avery is about to get the Margin Call Of His Life on his silver shorts. That's why he's trying so desperately to convince himself - and, by extension, us readers - of something he doesn't really believe. Intellectual dishonesty is the first haven of panic.


    On Nov 05 09:15 AM xearther wrote:

    > Whenever I see an article begin with "don't get me wrong" the caution
    > light glows bright. Same with that subtly manipulative word "clearly"
    > (takk for not using it).
    >
    > "Lover of silver", eh? If that's true, then I think your article
    > is a great example of the old phrase, "can't see the forest for the
    > trees".
    >
    > Beyond fiat currencies, beyond discerning what's real and what's
    > not (money-wise), besides the fact that they don't call him "Helicopter"
    > for nothing... you did not mention the "elephant in the room": JPMorgan
    > short 190 million ounces of COMEX silver futures.
    >
    > There is going to be a High Noon moment before this month is over
    > with CFTC Commissioner Bart Chilton and Chairman Gary Gensler baring
    > their six guns.
    >
    > Silver to $11? You're a funny guy, Mr. Goodman. A very funny guy.
    >
    >
    > For those wishing to get a better view of the forest, I recommend
    > a visit to the mind of Ted Butler: www.investmentrarities...
    Nov 05 10:13 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Looks like a lot of people have "religion," but I'd like to have seen some comments related to supply and demand. As for the JPM paper short position, it could be as artificial as the paper long positions. When JPM goes under, the longs will probably get screwed, and that will be the end of it.
    Nov 05 10:49 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Thanks to all of you who have spoken here to call this man a fool, as he most certainly is. Just as a homeowner has an increasing need to have backup for when the power grid goes down, savers and investors need silver for when the financial grid goes down. Long Gold and Short Silver. Clearly, this man is a genius.
    Nov 05 10:55 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    I disagree---2 words....... "Beijing put"
    Nov 05 11:30 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    From the "What if..." category.

    What if JPMorgan, one of, if not the, largest silver dealer and market maker on the planet, holds physical silver in New York and London, equal to, or even close, to the 190 million ounces they are short on COMEX. London warehouse statistics are not reported, so they could have silver there to cover their "Commercial Trader" a.k.a "hedger" short position in New York.
    If the CFTC decides that JPMorgan has to close their shorts and JPMorgan says "fine, we'll just deliver against all our shorts" and they move 100 million or 150 million oz from London to NY (it costs about 6 or 7 cents to move it by ship). Then all those who are long are going to get delivered against and many are speculators who sure don't want five 70 pound bars of silver to have to deal with and pay for. Who do they sell to?


    What if?
    Nov 05 11:43 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    This piece was intended as presenting some thoughts on a speculative trade. It was never intended as a primer on investing strategy. A very limited part of anyone's portfolio, in relation to overall wealth, can be devoted to speculative trades. The risk of being wiped out is too high to devote a large part of your portfolio to this type of activity. Remember, your family must eat, regardless of whether you win or lose in the market.

    A long term "core" position is very different. Long term, you may choose to hold stocks, bonds, metals, and so on. You've determined that the long term positions are worth sticking to for a very long time, regardless of whether they move up and down a bit, while you are holding them. Income can be generated from long term holdings in the form of dividends, and/or by selling covered calls at appropriate times.

    In contrast, speculative trades are short-term ones that have a reasonable likelihood of resulting in a spectacular gain. You take a big chance, and are willing to lose the value of the entire investment in exchange for the prospect of a big gain. You should not bet any more money than you can afford to lose on speculative trades.

    Acting on the opinion that silver was going to soar, back in March, and, now, acting on the opinion that silver is about to go down substantially, are both examples of speculative trades.
    Nov 05 11:48 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    The gold to silver ratio stands at about 62:1+- right now.
    I think silver will go higher, than break lower. If the dollar strengthens, silver will fall, too.
    Nov 05 12:00 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Silver at eleven dollars would be a great time to load up on some monster boxes.Wishful Thinking
    Nov 05 12:09 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    The author wrote: "This same foreign demand will fuel a dollar rally as soon as the Fed slows down its printing press. All assets, including gold, silver and stocks, have been artificially lifted since last March, by an influx of Fed liquidity (newly printed dollars)."

    However, the Fed may not slow down the quantitative easing for some time, especially if unemployment needs a boost. Additionally, granted that banks and hedge funds have artificially lifted the stock market to unreasonable heights, the commodities and gold prices have been rising due to the lack of confidence in the U.S. dollar. The two are separated by intent and may show a divergence if the market begins to fall with gold and silver going higher.
    Nov 05 12:26 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Rumors of a collapse of the dollar carry trade are starting and that will cause exactly what this article says. I love silver but if this starts to happen I suggest stops in your paper silver and wait patiently with an eagerness to back the truck up.

    Sometimes wishes do come true.

    Short term possibility, but long haul silver on a tear.
    Nov 05 12:27 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    We're on the same page!


    On Nov 05 12:27 PM doubleguns wrote:

    > Rumors of a collapse of the dollar carry trade are starting and that
    > will cause exactly what this article says. I love silver but if this
    > starts to happen I suggest stops in your paper silver and wait patiently
    > with an eagerness to back the truck up.
    >
    > Sometimes wishes do come true.
    >
    > Short term possibility, but long haul silver on a tear.
    Nov 05 12:33 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    I agree with the author on nearly everything.

    I've sold my AGQ and am now waiting for the big pullback with more cash than I've had in quite a while.

    Personally, I won't wait for 11 per ounce. I'll buy some at around 14.50 and more if it moves a couple dollars below that.

    But, damn, it's painful to hold cash.
    Nov 05 12:46 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    I disagree completely. Silver isn't even halfway towards its climb. After spending much time in the 10-15 dollar range, Silver recently broke into the next level (15-20). Although very volatile (as we already know) Silver is on an upward climb. $20 is clearly attainable in the next few short months and if the dollar continues to suffer, Silver has the potential to go beyond $20 and ounce and move into still another 5 dollar range (20-25). As for taking a different path than gold, that is simply wrong. These two are brothers and along with each other for the ride. I love silver because it gives the middle class an opportunity to ride a metal high while the rich coast with gold. Silver's ride up is far from over and the author of this article has completely missed the boat. Hang on Avery, another boat should be along soon.
    Nov 05 01:53 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    $14.50 an ounce??? You missed that boat son. Better hurry up before the 17.05 leaves the dock too.


    On Nov 05 12:46 PM yellowhoard wrote:

    > I agree with the author on nearly everything.
    >
    > I've sold my AGQ and am now waiting for the big pullback with more
    > cash than I've had in quite a while.
    >
    > Personally, I won't wait for 11 per ounce. I'll buy some at around
    > 14.50 and more if it moves a couple dollars below that.
    >
    > But, damn, it's painful to hold cash.
    Nov 05 01:56 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Avery, you have been on my "follow" list for a long time. Your articles are always well thought out. I am curious what you think about what Ted Butler has been saying about JP Morgan's massive short position on silver.
    Nov 05 02:19 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Warren Buffett is perhaps the most successful investor of all time and just bough Burlington Northern, making a huge bet going forward on the growth of the American economy over the next 5-10 years. If he is correct, I see the dollar strengthening over time. The consensus on Wall Street is so often wrong and the vast majority of traders are short the dollar. Buffett is an investor, not a trader. He believes in the long term creation of wealth, not trying to get rich overnight. Mark Faber, a doomsayer, claims the value of the dollar will eventually fall to zero. Gee, I'll bet he owns a lot of gold.
    Nov 05 02:31 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Dear Sir,

    Please give us a web site that shows the silver charts you are following. That would be a good start.

    You're answer to most of the comments here read like a politician. Silver may go down, but don't make excuses for your remarks, as you've written...
    Nov 05 02:53 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Good bull and bear comments for the most part, IMHO. One quote comes to mind:

    "It's not pulling back very much. And it's not giving people who haven't yet invested a chance to get in at a lower price.That tends to happen in a bull market; people wait around for a correction, but it never goes down far enough to give people an opportunity to get in at a more favorable price."


    ....
    Nov 05 02:54 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Those interested in such things may find it interesting that open interest in Dec silver has declined each of the last 2 days by a total of about 4000 lots.

    Dec gold open interest dropped yesterday by 2500 lots.

    It's kinda difficult to keep a rally going based on short covering.
    These metals will need fresh long buyers to keep prices moving higher.
    Nov 05 03:07 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Plenty of silver with the base metal mining? We're in a silver shortage position and have been living off recycled silver, which can't go on forever, with more and more silver uses.

    Until there's a dollar event? Good heavens--look at the dollar chart. This is the event. The dollar is sliding, sliding, sliding. That's an event.

    And you trust the Fed to stop monetizing the debt? On what planet?

    As for the Buffet bet on Burlington Northern, that's a bet on peak oil, not a bet on growth. It' a bet on diminished trucking and an interesting step at that.
    Nov 05 04:19 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Actually, it depends on who is covering. If it's the big commercials ( such as JP Morgan ) who are starting to cover, you could see the biggest price explosion in 25 years. Granted it wouldn't last more than a couple weeks, but it sure would be a fast, fun ride.

    Commercials got trapped in the wheat market a couple years ago and March Minneapolis wheat futures went to $25. That was about $17.50 above the previous record high of $7.50.

    Amazing to think about. Anyone have Jamie Dimon's phone number?


    On Nov 05 03:07 PM kohalakid wrote:

    > Those interested in such things may find it interesting that open
    > interest in Dec silver has declined each of the last 2 days by a
    > total of about 4000 lots.
    >
    > Dec gold open interest dropped yesterday by 2500 lots.
    >
    > It's kinda difficult to keep a rally going based on short covering.
    >
    > These metals will need fresh long buyers to keep prices moving higher.
    Nov 05 04:24 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Many people think the banks are making naked shorts.


    On Nov 05 09:59 AM kohalakid wrote:

    > Why are the large short positions of the banks "illegal"???
    Nov 05 04:45 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Naked shorting is not illegal in the futures market, while it is illegal in stocks. So those complaining about naked shorts in futures either don't know what they are talking about or are trying to sell something.


    On Nov 05 04:45 PM Joe Bruin wrote:

    > Many people think the banks are making naked shorts.
    Nov 05 05:00 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Buffett is buying railroads because they're going to be the most efficient way of moving what few goods there will be to move when diesel is $10 a gallon and still rising. He's not making any huge bet on the American economy, he's making a Hobson's Choice.


    On Nov 05 02:31 PM Russell Upsomgrubb wrote:

    > Warren Buffett is perhaps the most successful investor of all time
    > and just bough Burlington Northern, making a huge bet going forward
    > on the growth of the American economy over the next 5-10 years. If
    > he is correct, I see the dollar strengthening over time. The consensus
    > on Wall Street is so often wrong and the vast majority of traders
    > are short the dollar. Buffett is an investor, not a trader. He believes
    > in the long term creation of wealth, not trying to get rich overnight.
    > Mark Faber, a doomsayer, claims the value of the dollar will eventually
    > fall to zero. Gee, I'll bet he owns a lot of gold.
    Nov 05 08:10 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    The dollar carry trade is here to STAY for as long as the US$ is the currency equivalent of Charmin, and the Fed isn't about to stop the pre$$e$ now running at redline RPM, as the Sikorskis keep taking off from the Wizard Of Oz Memorial Heliport. The $ is the new Yen, and will be for the next 20 years, just as the Yen was for 20 years.


    On Nov 05 12:27 PM doubleguns wrote:

    > Rumors of a collapse of the dollar carry trade are starting and that
    > will cause exactly what this article says. I love silver but if this
    > starts to happen I suggest stops in your paper silver and wait patiently
    > with an eagerness to back the truck up.
    >
    > Sometimes wishes do come true.
    >
    > Short term possibility, but long haul silver on a tear.
    Nov 05 08:14 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    HAHAHAHA! That article was the BIGGEST LAUGH RIOT today! Hey, dude, take your picture down. Your article is retarded BTW. This guess says he needs a dollar event - try the last 8 years! Only a FOOL would part with ANY silver at any price less than a new high. I won't be selling ounce "number 1" until a new all time high. I may consider some aggressive selling at a new all time REAL high, using John Williams inflation gauge and NOT the fake CPI.

    As far as base metal mine increases, you need to look at the OBVIOUS fact that silver demand is FAR FAR higher than mine supply, by at LEAST 200-300 million ozs per annum. Recyling old scrap has been the ONLY thing keeping silver low for 2 decades and it's ALMOST run out. New precious metal investment will SUCK UP all that silver faster than you can say "Hi ho Silver!"

    Let's not forget only 8 times more silver is produced than gold annually (600-650 mil ozs vs 80 mil gold)! Why the ratio is 62:1 is a MYSTERY to me considering all the gold ever mined is STILL THERE whereas 90% of silver is IRRETRIEVABLE.

    Let fools goahead and sell silver - and gold too while you're at it! What are you going to do? Hold fiat money with every world central bank in QE modes?!??! Don't you realize USA is BANKRUPT - regardless of Fed/Treasury RHETORIC. Do you honestly think general equities will hedge effectively knowing somewhere down the line the economy will NOT get much better, people are BROKE, and the consumer is DEAD?

    People without tangible assets will be up S**T CREEK without a paddle!
    Nov 05 08:31 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    are you on drugs your information is incorrect with no facts to back it up the money machine continues to print the new currency is coming sooner than later
    Nov 05 08:31 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Avery, thank you. Time will vindicate you and stay with your view. By the way would you recomend shorting the ishare silver as the best way to play this? Thanks
    Sam


    On Nov 05 11:48 AM Avery Goodman wrote:

    > This piece was intended as presenting some thoughts on a speculative
    > trade. It was never intended as a primer on investing strategy. A
    > very limited part of anyone's portfolio, in relation to overall wealth,
    > can be devoted to speculative trades. The risk of being wiped out
    > is too high to devote a large part of your portfolio to this type
    > of activity. Remember, your family must eat, regardless of whether
    > you win or lose in the market.
    >
    > A long term "core" position is very different. Long term, you may
    > choose to hold stocks, bonds, metals, and so on. You've determined
    > that the long term positions are worth sticking to for a very long
    > time, regardless of whether they move up and down a bit, while you
    > are holding them. Income can be generated from long term holdings
    > in the form of dividends, and/or by selling covered calls at appropriate
    > times.
    >
    > In contrast, speculative trades are short-term ones that have a reasonable
    > likelihood of resulting in a spectacular gain. You take a big chance,
    > and are willing to lose the value of the entire investment in exchange
    > for the prospect of a big gain. You should not bet any more money
    > than you can afford to lose on speculative trades.
    >
    > Acting on the opinion that silver was going to soar, back in March,
    > and, now, acting on the opinion that silver is about to go down substantially,
    > are both examples of speculative trades.
    Nov 05 10:13 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    As others point out, "Waiting for a dollar event"?
    What universe is he in? I just looked at his photo,
    that strange, crooked smile and know there's some crooked agenda there ... is he a relative of Kitco's
    Jon Nadler?
    Nov 05 10:45 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    I don't think JP boys will want to part with the remaining silver stockpile. In a currency "what if" event that silver is only like 1.75 billion. Oprah alone could corner silver market. And how many billionaires and millionaires are there in the world?!


    On Nov 05 11:43 AM kohalakid wrote:

    > From the "What if..." category.
    >
    > What if JPMorgan, one of, if not the, largest silver dealer and market
    > maker on the planet, holds physical silver in New York and London,
    > equal to, or even close, to the 190 million ounces they are short
    > on COMEX. London warehouse statistics are not reported, so they could
    > have silver there to cover their "Commercial Trader" a.k.a "hedger"
    > short position in New York.
    > If the CFTC decides that JPMorgan has to close their shorts and JPMorgan
    > says "fine, we'll just deliver against all our shorts" and they move
    > 100 million or 150 million oz from London to NY (it costs about 6
    > or 7 cents to move it by ship). Then all those who are long are going
    > to get delivered against and many are speculators who sure don't
    > want five 70 pound bars of silver to have to deal with and pay for.
    > Who do they sell to?
    >
    >
    > What if?
    Nov 05 11:20 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    missing one huge point... core inflation is not necessary for an asset bubble to persist as a global foreign rotation out of dollars and into commodities continues. this would then look more like deflation.
    Nov 05 11:24 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    On Nov 05 02:31 PM Russell Upsomgrubb wrote:

    > Warren Buffett is perhaps the most successful investor of all time
    > and just bough Burlington Northern, making a huge bet going forward
    > on the growth of the American economy over the next 5-10 years.

    The BN purchase can just as easily be viewed as a bet that commodities (i.e. coal, grain) will be transported by rail to our west coast ports en route to China and India. Moreover, it can be viewed as shorting the U.S dollar inasmuch as BH will be using cash (and borrowing some as well) to purchase a hard asset (the railroad).

    > Mark Faber, a doomsayer, claims the value of the
    > dollar will eventually fall to zero. Gee, I'll bet he owns a lot
    > of gold.

    Dr. Faber is correct: all fiat currencies eventually fall to zero. Gold, on the other hand, is money and has been so for 5,000 years. I disagree with Dr. Faber that we will experience hyperinflation in the next few years, but I do believe that we will experience high inflation here in America given the Fed's relentless money printing.
    Nov 06 05:54 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    "Sovereign demand can potentially support gold against both artificial price suppression, and its inverse relationship to the dollar. There is no sovereign demand for silver."

    Let us assume you are correct. Currently, the silver-gold ratio is at 62-1. The most recent peak was about 80-1 in Feb-03. If gold remains at about $1100 and the ratio revisits 80-1, that calls for a $13.75/oz. silver price. An $11/oz. price (with gold at $1100) would mean a 100-1 ratio; not impossible, but highly unlikely.

    Now, if gold were to retrace some gains, obviously silver could fall as well. However, with the Indian and Chinese "puts" on gold now extant, any correction in the gold price would seem to be short-lived.
    Nov 06 06:08 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    The dollar has no reason to go up.Debt ridden paper.
    Nov 06 06:22 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    That's just wishful ignorance. In the long term maybe but in the short term the mining industries producing these two metals are vastly different. You can't just ignore supply.


    On Nov 05 01:53 PM jimbo's gravy train wrote:

    > As for taking a different path
    > than gold, that is simply wrong. These two are brothers and along
    > with each other for the ride.
    Nov 06 08:09 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    whilst i accept that silver prices are finding it hard work trying to overcome the $18.00 resistance the medium to longer term for the metal still looks very positive.,
    Nov 06 08:23 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    The easy money on shorting silver was only "easy" if you caught the exact top a couple weeks ago. I lightened up on PAAS then, but I wouldn't sleep well if I was heavily short silver right now. But let's say silver does get down to $11: I'll be accumulating positions all the way down to put together a small basket of silver miners.

    Certainly the USD$ short trade has gotten WAAAAAAAY overcrowded, and the buck is due for some kind of bounce to shake out the market. But the crazy calls for a 30% plus US$ rally ignore that the world is now VERY aware that US fiscal and monetary policy that is, has been, and will almost certainly be a
    house of cards. Any US$ rally will be met with ample supply of sellers. US$ buyers will need to be EXTREMELY nimble to extract any profit from a rally and not be caught holding a hot potato.

    And let me say I'm NOT being political. Almost none of the "tea party" types cared about fiscal and monetary issues until a democrat was elected, so I don't really see them as intellectual brethren so much as pawns of right who would not care one iota if it was one of their guys running up the red ink.
    Nov 06 08:26 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Forecasters of gold and silver prices should take a lesson from weathermen, who look thorough the window one last time before releasing the day's forecast.

    Equally funny is the reasoning given for a significant dollar rally. These volk say that the dollar is going to get so cheap (because of the FED printing it at record pace) that everyone will just rush to get more. And the debt does not matter because we owe it to ourselves. And the economy is going to get better as we print more dollars. Any day now.
    Nov 06 09:09 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    I was going to say the same thing, except I get an itchy finger around 15. Anything under 15 and I'm starting to buy. If it goes as low as 14, I'm all in.


    On Nov 05 12:46 PM yellowhoard wrote:

    > I agree with the author on nearly everything.
    >
    > I've sold my AGQ and am now waiting for the big pullback with more
    > cash than I've had in quite a while.
    >
    > Personally, I won't wait for 11 per ounce. I'll buy some at around
    > 14.50 and more if it moves a couple dollars below that.
    >
    > But, damn, it's painful to hold cash.
    Nov 06 10:13 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    And I have to say the number of commenters who think that silver can only go up from here gives me pause. I like silver, but I never like seeing all out bullishness, as it so often signals that the top is near (at least in the short term).
    Nov 06 10:16 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Man I hope you are wrong. Physical silver = good.
    Nov 06 10:22 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Because there is no physical silver to back it up.


    On Nov 05 04:45 PM Joe Bruin wrote:

    > Many people think the banks are making naked shorts.
    Nov 06 11:32 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    So what??

    What backs up a bond?? 100% money? No, a bond is a promise to pay dollars due in the future. It may be backed by physical assets or only the hope of the issuer to be able to earn profits to pay back the bond. And the buyer should understand that.

    Silver futures contracts are promises to deliver silver in the future. You don't, by any stretch of what is legal or logical, have to have physical silver now to fulfill an obligation to deliver it in July of 2010.
    You could, if you were a hedger and protecting against price risk, but there is no obligation.
    For all those who criticize COMEX as being a scam or somehow "illegal", they simply don't understand its function. if you want physical spot silver, go get it somewhere else. That's fine. That's what the spot OTC market is for. COMEX is for something else.
    It's like criticizing your dentist for not being a good orthopedist.


    On Nov 06 11:32 AM optionsgirl wrote:

    > Because there is no physical silver to back it up.
    Nov 06 12:05 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    India didnt buy 220 tons of gold recently becuase they thought the dollar was going up.
    China hasnt spent billions on commodities because they wanted to keep dollars.
    If we raise our interest rates the housing markets will get creamed further.
    Where or where is the logic of our dollar going up. to send precious alternative metals down...
    this essay just doesnt make any sense..
    If China decides to start buying silver as well as gold. The shows over. The rest of the world will be puny compared to this 900 pound goliath .
    and they are very nervous about the dollar. For good reason.
    there will come a time with many investors when gold will just be too rich for consumption and one of the major beneficiaries is silver.
    I buy silver as i think gold is too high by comparison.
    and many others do the same .. but more will do this inthe future as Gold goes to the roof.

    JPM is holding the silver shorts in check and depressing the price .
    so i think never more than now is the time to buy..

    Nov 06 12:50 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    "The Fed has certainly set the stage for a catastrophic dollar collapse, but European bank demand for dollars, for purposes of covering debts relating to imploding dollar denominated assets is preventing immediate implosion of the currency itself."

    I keep reading this and believe you. But can you explain it better, with examples, so I can understand it, rather than simply agreeing with it.

    Where do you find this information? What does the process look like?
    Nov 06 01:03 PM | Link | Reply
  •  

    Dec gold open interest dropped by almost 6000 lots yesterday.
    Silver up a little.

    Just remember...you can't keep a rally going on just short covering.
    Maybe a correction coming due???
    Nov 06 01:27 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    OP, Read my lips, Silver will be $25 by Jan.2010 !!
    And you will writing articles for your High School newspaper !! (lol , just kidding..the further)
    Nov 06 02:32 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Please do some reading on the Weimar Republic of post WWI Germany if you want to see what it looks like. It is not pretty, as a matter of fact, it is decidedly ugly.


    On Nov 06 01:03 PM thotdoc wrote:

    > "The Fed has certainly set the stage for a catastrophic dollar collapse,
    > but European bank demand for dollars, for purposes of covering debts
    > relating to imploding dollar denominated assets is preventing immediate
    > implosion of the currency itself."
    >
    > I keep reading this and believe you. But can you explain it better,
    > with examples, so I can understand it, rather than simply agreeing
    > with it.
    >
    > Where do you find this information? What does the process look like?
    Nov 06 04:18 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    While it's kind of unusual for me to defend anything Avery writes, he DOES give reasons why silver should be singled out.
    Whether you agree with the reasons or not is a different matter, but he does point out that silver exhibits more price volitility (correct, IMO) and that silver and gold may be entering a period of "new fundamentals".
    Disagree with him on his conclusions if you wish, but he does make a case for singling out silver.


    On Nov 06 03:17 PM Jeff Nielson wrote:

    > I found virtually no redeemable value in this article. The author's
    > comments about silver production demonstrate he has no understanding
    > of silver mining - at all.
    >
    > As for his central argument of "why" silver is poised for a fall,
    > what he essentially said is that he expects ALL commodities and ALL
    > equities to fall. Based on this extremely general (and simplistic)
    > reasoning there is utterly NO justification for singling out silver
    > as an asset-class.
    >
    > It would be like expressing an opinion that ALL the share prices
    > of U.S. banks were set to decline, and then titling the article "Goldman
    > Sachs going down".
    >
    > Apparently the ONLY point in singling out silver is simply to attract
    > attention to an otherwise banal post - which offers no real insights
    > of any kind.
    Nov 06 04:22 PM | Link | Reply
  •  

    in the case of margin calls, everything gets clobbered.

    it was only a year ago that we saw mind blowing margin call devastation.
    Nov 06 05:00 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    A number of technical analysts including Prechter have made similar predictions, so it would not surprise me if silver did go down a bit. This pop in the price of the dollar is predicated on the theory that people will rush to buy dollars for safety if the market starts to tank. However, since the advent of the web, most people are more knowledgeable about markets. I don't know why anyone would want to buy dollars in the event of a market collapse. Many of the same analysts who are predicting a pop in the dollar are also predicting depression of a magnitude never before seen. They are also predicting the market may start collapsing any day now. If the dollar does in fact collapse from 75-76 to 42-44 it would seem to me that it would be a good idea to back the truck up--in the event silver does drop a bit. In fact, I think it would be wise to have 50% or more of a persons assets in commodities especially silver and gold. I remember the depression vividly. Banks failed. People lost their savings. Stocks became worthless. Even though corporations promised payment in gold of a certain fineness, the bond became worthless. The bonds of foreign countries became worthless. Only gold and silver kept or increase their value. None of this propaganda served up to me every day by smiling pundits on CNBC & elsewhere trying to scam me out of my property is going to change my mind. Let the price of silver and gold drop, I will keep mine and maybe buy more. I do not gamble. You scammed me in the past. You ran the market up, scammed me into buying, then shorted causing me to lose big time, but you are not going to do it this time. Screw you.
    Nov 06 05:28 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Of course the bottom can't fall out of Gold and Silver because then all your work on your website bullion bulls of Canada is mute! and it will be mute by spring of next year when all the precious metals are tumbling down hill.

    So zip it Nielson, it is time to stop padding your pockets on the dime of the helpless fools who follow your advice and think what you say has any merit.

    GreatWhite


    On Nov 06 03:17 PM Jeff Nielson wrote:

    > I found virtually no redeemable value in this article. The author's
    > comments about silver production demonstrate he has no understanding
    > of silver mining - at all.
    >
    > As for his central argument of "why" silver is poised for a fall,
    > what he essentially said is that he expects ALL commodities and ALL
    > equities to fall. Based on this extremely general (and simplistic)
    > reasoning there is utterly NO justification for singling out silver
    > as an asset-class.
    >
    > It would be like expressing an opinion that ALL the share prices
    > of U.S. banks were set to decline, and then titling the article "Goldman
    > Sachs going down".
    >
    > Apparently the ONLY point in singling out silver is simply to attract
    > attention to an otherwise banal post - which offers no real insights
    > of any kind.
    Nov 06 05:56 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    That is a great analysis. Very independent thinking displayed here. I differ with you as to timing. That is, I expect seasonal strength to carry silver through to March 2010. Also, the developments you speak of are likely to develop relatively slowly, as is the case with macro events (think about bond prices for goodness sake! They are lagging the USD by maybe a decade now!). I'm not saying you're wrong, but I suggest a lag of several months before these concerns play out.
    Nov 06 09:24 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Re: The lengthy silver vs. gold debate.

    Silver will follow gold if there is sufficient investment demand for silver. Period. Investment demand is the only factor that matters to this debate.

    Gold is built on investment demand, and silver is its volatile second cousin. However, it's hard to imagine significant weakness in silver if investment demand in gold stays strong. I am most confident in gold for all of the obvious reasons, but I certainly believe that strong gold supports the silver price, regardless of industrial demand, new supply, etc., in the silver sector.

    In other words, in the face of rising investment demand, the supply of gold and silver are both very limited compared to what...? Dollars, Euros, Pounds, Yuan, Yen, etc.? For sure, the supply of silver is limited in this context.
    Nov 06 10:33 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    "based on charts I've examined, the way I see things, silver prices could temporarily fall to $11 per troy, again, or even lower, before March 2010. "

    Well, according to MY chart analysis, silver may pull back to around $14.50 (NOT $11)...and then continue upward to $20. Sure, I could trade around that and attempt to avoid a maybe 10-15% decline in paper gains...but instead I think I'll take the opportunity to ADD to my silver position on weakness.

    "Prognostications as to exact prices, of course, are seldom accurate."

    At least you got that part right. Still, I say silver will hit $20 before it sees $11.
    Nov 06 10:41 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    I agree. I think Goodman is full of crap. the only way silver will go down is if JPM is about to short 1000s of contracts again.


    On Nov 05 08:39 AM Mike Landfair aka Mover Mike wrote:

    > The indicator that led you to be bullish on Silver, backwardation,
    > hasn't changed for the better it's gotten more narrow. Yesterday
    > according to Bill Murphy's column at Le Metropole Cafe, "There is
    > only 1 cents of contango in silver NOV/DEC contracts and only 2 cents
    > NOV/JAN contracts. The contango in gold NOV/DEC remained at only
    > $0.6 and $1.2 for NOV/FEB."
    > How can that be bearish for Silver? Hmmm!
    Nov 07 12:33 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    The chart of silver certainly is ominous, this could even signal something bad for gold although gold looks set to keep climbing.
    The dollar also appears on the verge of rallying very strongly but it has continued to disappoint those expecting a reversal, the Fed's last statement makes it obvious the dollar will continue down in the short run, too obvious perhaps. Maybe markets will just frustrate both sides sides for a few months.
    Disclosure: long gold, long dollar against aussie, kiwi, loonie .
    Nov 07 04:06 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    The guy who wrote..."Two words. Beijing put" is right on the money. China has advertised on TV for its citizens to invest in silver/gold. Mr. Goodman obviously knows nothing about Chinese culture or losing face. China WILL support/maintain the price of gold and silver at certain levels.....and trust me.....they won't let it go to $11 bucks and piss off the peasants.
    Nov 07 09:15 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Silver at $11??? This reminds me of the Elliot Wave people who predicted late in the spring that gold would fall to $600. Instead it turned around and went to $1100. There are a lot of, "I believes" in this article, without specific date ranges or hard numbers. People can believe anything (and they do). What are the probabilities of each of these beliefs happening at the relevant points in time? Once you multiply all those probabilities together is the overall number much greater than zero? Where are the hard facts to back up the predictions? Charts? Numbers? The contents of this article appear to be nothing but a bunch of baseless suppostions.
    Nov 07 09:33 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    You'd be AMAZED at the number of so-called "educated Americans" who somehow, amazingly, still believe the world starts at the Statue of Liberty and ends at the Golden Gate Bridge.

    China is still taking batting practice; for them, the game hasn't even begun.

    For the U.S., the game is long-ago over, and the "team" is still on the field trying to figure out how they lost.


    On Nov 07 09:15 AM Echute88 wrote:

    > The guy who wrote..."Two words. Beijing put" is right on the money.
    > China has advertised on TV for its citizens to invest in silver/gold.
    > Mr. Goodman obviously knows nothing about Chinese culture or losing
    > face. China WILL support/maintain the price of gold and silver at
    > certain levels.....and trust me.....they won't let it go to $11 bucks
    > and piss off the peasants.
    Nov 07 11:27 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Avery, YOU NEED A NEW JOB. Even Wikipedia is SMARTER THAN YOUR ANALYSIS! Silver is the BEST INVESTMENT in the WORLD today. Have you ever looked inside a LAPTOP? No more gold-plated anything except the hard drive connectors. Everything is SILVER. SILVER, SILVER, SILVER, SILVER!!!!!
    -Tim Roller (available for employment) tim8rolls@yahoo.com


    On Nov 05 11:48 AM Avery Goodman wrote:

    > This piece was intended as presenting some thoughts on a speculative
    > trade. It was never intended as a primer on investing strategy. A
    > very limited part of anyone's portfolio, in relation to overall wealth,
    > can be devoted to speculative trades. The risk of being wiped out
    > is too high to devote a large part of your portfolio to this type
    > of activity. Remember, your family must eat, regardless of whether
    > you win or lose in the market.
    >
    > A long term "core" position is very different. Long term, you may
    > choose to hold stocks, bonds, metals, and so on. You've determined
    > that the long term positions are worth sticking to for a very long
    > time, regardless of whether they move up and down a bit, while you
    > are holding them. Income can be generated from long term holdings
    > in the form of dividends, and/or by selling covered calls at appropriate
    > times.
    >
    > In contrast, speculative trades are short-term ones that have a reasonable
    > likelihood of resulting in a spectacular gain. You take a big chance,
    > and are willing to lose the value of the entire investment in exchange
    > for the prospect of a big gain. You should not bet any more money
    > than you can afford to lose on speculative trades.
    >
    > Acting on the opinion that silver was going to soar, back in March,
    > and, now, acting on the opinion that silver is about to go down substantially,
    > are both examples of speculative trades.
    Nov 07 01:41 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Silver is likely to go up in price over the very long term. I have very clearly stated, many times, in this article and others, that silver is an excellent very long term investment. It is better to buy it when it is cheaper, however, rather than when it is more expensive.

    As a long term silver investor, you will need to grit your teeth as it gets periodically clobbered. The reason for the volatility is a topic for a book, or, at minimum, an article, because historically silver and gold are the most stable commodities. Not anymore. Without a long explanation of why, we can simply say that lack of effective regulation of the futures markets casino clearly has something to do with it.

    Decent men do what they can to make the world a fairer place. But, practical men will also deal with the world as it is. Practical men will not engage in swordfights against windmills. It is not always pleasant to deal with reality.

    One reality that an author on seekingalpha must deal with is the requirement of disclosing long or short positioning, I DO NOT endorse the idea of people taking short positions in silver. Generally, that should be left to people who have the knowledge to do it without putting themselves at risk. One can be both hedge existing silver investments, or become overtly short silver in many ways, including buying puts.

    The essence of this article is simply an explanation of why I reversed my opinion, temporarily, on a bullish speculative trade suggested in an article I wrote in early March. Nothing more.
    Nov 08 05:00 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Mr. Goodman thinks the US$ shall rise after the new year comes, yeah, but it shall be at the cost of the price of oil going up; since, this dollar rally for 2010 is to allow Americans to get their housing conditions stablized. However, this 2010 rally for the US$ shall not necessarily bring back jobs for the working classes! In full contact sports we believe a three point blow is one fundamental for driving the opponent, in physics we work with three dimentional
    objects on graphs etc. What I am trying to say is that after 2010 there can be more bear movements in the markets because I don't think our economy can properly rebound without our exportations improving and that shall be after the C.I.S. of Moscow joins the WTO!
    Piece of cake, praise unto the Lord, Amen.
    Nov 08 11:12 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Pardon my weak analogy, only I agree that we are in for some serious inflation and the resulting precious metals boom should be just as serious! Nice reply, A.G.!
    I believe one expert has stated the law of averages for gold prices comes out something similar to every 82 days for a bear, and every 95 days for a bull. Could someone please correct my poor sense of recall?
    Nov 08 11:28 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Farmland is good if you can find and afford it / and i own physical gold and silver. Farm land is getting harder to afford. good luck everyone.
    Nov 09 02:41 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    I agree I will sit tight. I am torn between a defation camp with the aging baby boomers saving instead of consuming,and all of the debt deleveraging. And the inflation camp with the printing press in warp drive,along with 1.4 trillion deficits. What trumps what? Is there more weight to a full speed printing press or a spent baby boomer consumer?


    On Nov 05 09:41 AM Jimbo wrote:

    > As a holder of physical silver and an investor in a broad collection
    > of miners, You arguments sound plausible to me. I plan to sit tight
    > since I believe the destruction of the U.S. currency lies ahead.
    Nov 10 06:49 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    As a newcomer to holding metals I've done a lot of reading. Maybe my comprehension needs some work but this is the way I see it:

    1. In times of panic, thoughts turn to gold, which is useful as a preservation of wealth in an inflationary period [or dollar depreciation period, which by all accounts has been going on since 1913]
    2. Gold, Silver and most miners will prosper and good for them.
    3. If the SHTF, loads of folks will be sitting on a mountain of gold, which if it becomes an alternate currency, could be interesting. Seems a lot more gold has been hoarded over the years, so it may not be quite as scarce as the pundits would have you believe.
    4. Silver has been IGNORED [as have the pgms] Why?
    5. Methinks that the bankster/FED mob wants the sheeple in gold and they are going for silver. Has a lot more room to go higher and historically [pre-1913 Fed at ratios of 15-20:1. Seems grossly under-priced to me. Once silver spikes, perhaps some institutions will have their own mystery hoards that will help bail them out from their devastating balance sheets [Including the Treasury?]
    6. While silver industrial use has dropped, its decline was due in part to less folks buying wedding silver AND decline in traditional photo film processes as people went digital. Currently, it's been proven effective for water sterilization [have a silver ionizer in the hot tub!] and emergency wound treatment. Both of the aforementioned have a market and excellent potential growth. Coupled with investor demand which has been significant, I don't think the miners can get it out of the ground quickly enough.

    So maybe a fall back, but I don't see a tumbling price to 11 or so, nor do I see any fallback position lasting long.

    Even if the dollar has an immaculate rising, ask yourself, 'If the fed has been debasing the greenback for 90 years, why stop now?' All they would do is slow down the rate of descent. Frankly at this point, enough people are just too well-informed and will not trust the paper.

    I foresee folks hiring contractors for work around the house and paying in silver coins.

    Another note, I read that SA is shipping fractional Krugerrand in rather large quantity to the States. A first in this sort of volume.

    Now I'm going to throw darts at the board to make my next commodity forecast, lol.
    Nov 12 01:02 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    I am an upper middle class middle aged working guy , I do pretty well I guess , Have a 401k and 2 IRA Roth and traditional make my monthly contributions, but I did not start saving for retirement until I was 40yo , so I have 25+/- years to get some retirment savings going, Silver imo is going to be my saving success, I buy 10-20 ounces of physical silver every 2 weeks , On payday, on my way home from work, I stop ay my local coin shop and pick up 10-20 ounces of silver, been doing it for over 5 years now, since my 40th BDay, I buy silver eagles , high grade rounds & bars, even 90% usa coinage, my local guy always has something different at good price, I enjoy the experience, I have bought for as low as $6 ounce and bought as high as $22 ounce over last 5+years , Silver has many advantages over cash stocks bonds, mainly it is of course "undeclared" in the small amounts I purchase and pretty much a hidden asset , I can buy (or sell) 10-20 ounces and no one in the govt has to know , I enjoy that , The flucuations in price have been good for me , when price is low, I will but the full 20 ounces, when it is higher I buy the 10-12 ounces, Long term I plan to have 10000+ ounces minimum over 25 years. I have 2 very secure simple safes at home and also use an off site insured safe deposit type box, The cost of storage is extremely low, $240 per year fpr box and insurance, well add $400 if you include my home alarm system but that is for more then just the silver, My Kids love the silver and all of my friends and family love my Christmas and BDay presents of various silver coins, bars, rounds. Usually and ounce or 2 at most. I have created a few other silver bugs along the way. Silver is better then money, it is always in demand in certain growing circles for investments, it is a safe store of wealth, it has increasing industrial and medicla uses, high tech uses and in the end it is safer then cash, it will never be worth zero and if something Bad does happen in society, USA currency, you will be well served to have some phyical silver on hand. IMO Price flucuations ARE made to buy , buy the dips hard , and long term holders, buy the rallies, but buy smaller amounts, Dollar cost average , IMO everyone should have a long term Silver cache for your future, your families future, and it is really fun to shop and buy silver, give silver as gifts , teach your kids the value of metals, I have found so many postive forces have come from my silver investments, IMO dont get all caught up in the short , longs , BS paper silver products, buy HOLD physical silver assets , maybe own a few minders like HL, CDE, PAAS, but stay away from the COMEX and all that short paper silver , SLV intrigues me until I read about them using leverage and hedges and lending out the silver so it is not a true hard asset buy any longer , that paper Silver is going to crumble under the forces of manipulation imo , I remember paper silver was $12 ounce, but phyical silver was $15 ounce or more last year , I have seen that a few times over last few years, shorts crumbled price "on paper" but NO ONE could go buy phyical silver for the artificially created prices.... I enjoy Silver and silver related articles , Enjoy the silver threads here , If you buy paper silver be ready to LOSE money IMO , if you buy Hard asset long term silver you WILL be rewarded....
    Nov 14 10:37 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Very Interesting Article:
    www.marketwatch.com/st...
    Nov 14 11:55 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    The squeeze is on! Thanks Ben!
    Nov 16 05:46 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Silver generally out performs gold in bull markets and under performs in bear markets. There are some wild days ahead for those of us who trade metals, especially silver.


    On Nov 14 11:55 AM User 429609 wrote:

    > Very Interesting Article:
    > www.marketwatch.com/st...
    Nov 16 06:01 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    I think we need go back to silver's and gold's definition
    btwos.com/silver.html
    btwos.com/gold.html
    Nov 17 04:24 AM | Link | Reply