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Vangel V
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>The Great Silver Bubble - Keith Weiner - Monetary Metals
My problem with Keith is the arrogance. He believes that he knows far moe than he does even as he accepts certain information as fact without question and dismisses arguments of a rigged market even though some of the players have admitted to rigging the market. In the short term, anything can happen so Keith's use of certain trends and indicators may be harmless. But in the long term, the dollar is going to move to much lower levels, the bond markets will collapse, and the metals will become much more expensive. Whether the catalyst appears tomorrow, next week, next month, or in three years is irrelevant. If silver and gold prices fall it is an opportunity to buy more. If they rise, it does not matter if prices get ahead of themselves because the primary bull market trend is still intact.

Note that we have seen a huge bubble in shale oil production. NONE of the primary producers have been able to generate positive cash flows, even when prices were above $90 a barrel. What does Keith think happens when that bubble pops and one of the props for the USD is taken away?


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Beginning of the headline :The price of gold was down about fifteen Federal Reserve Notes this week. The price of silver was down sixty-two copper-plated zinc pennies. Is the Federal Reserve Note a suitable instrument with which to measure gold? Can one really use debased pennies—which aren’t even made of the base metal copper any more—to measure the value of gold? We don’t know. We just work here. Quick, buy some silver, we hear it’s going to $100! Not so fast. As the headline suggests, we think silver has been bid into... Read More
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