by Hircus follow (1)


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I have a jar with a couple hundred dollars worth of old "junk" (pre 1965 90% silver) coins that I had planned on cashing in when silver peaked over $50 an ounce. Here we are and I am not sure if I should cash in. If I took the cash (+/- $10K) what would I do with it?
If I took the cash (+/- $10K) what would I do with it?
Invest it in your sailboat?
Sailboats aren't investments.
Silver broke $60 an ounce today.
• Industrial Demand
Silver gets used.
A gold bar that size would be way to heavy to hold so casually.
Has to hit about $150 to exceed its inflation adjusted all time high.
... and pays no dividends!
A gold bar that size would be way to heavy to hold so casually.
Central banks and large bullion dealers typically hold “Good Delivery” gold bars, most commonly around 400 troy ounces (about 12.4–12.5 kg / 27.3–27.5 lb).
Central banks and large bullion dealers typically hold “Good Delivery” gold bars, most commonly around 400 troy ounces (about 12.4–12.5 kg / 27.3–27.5 lb).
Silver: $75/oz.
and the US mint selling 1 oz eagles for $95. Any idea where i can buy guaranteed 99.9% silver for $75 oz?
But also some of it is due to a speculative bubble forming this year. That is why I don’t expect a large crash but some correction in silver and gold prices. Like every other asset class, it should return to the mean.
The prices you see reported are generally based on a single silver contract. 5000 troy ounces.
The London Interbank Offered Rate (Libor) scandal involved the manipulation of interest rate reporting by major banks in London, with evidence suggesting collusion among financial institutions and pressure from regulators during the 2008 financial crisis.
Libor, a benchmark rate used in approximately $350 trillion worth of financial instruments globally, was calculated based on estimates submitted by a panel of leading banks regarding their borrowing costs, rather than actual transactions.
Between 2007 and 2009, Barclays and other banks were found to have submitted false rates for two primary reasons: to benefit traders' positions and to manage public perception of the bank's financial health.
Misc says
The prices you see reported are generally based on a single silver contract. 5000 troy ounces.
what happens when sovereign wealth funds buy 1000 contracts and want delivery and the sellers can't find that amount of silver anywhere near those prices?
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