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gold & silver prices


               
2022 Oct 16, 12:14pm   8,806 views  119 comments

by Hircus   follow (1)  

Why are gold & silver prices trending down this past half year? My simplistic understanding makes me think their value should rise during times of inflation and uncertainty. Maybe they spiked at the begginning of the year due to the war, and fears have allayed since then?



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35   fdhfoiehfeoi   2023 Mar 16, 3:32pm  

It's been high for the past few years. If you're buying, definitely silver, always physical, always take delivery.
36   exfatguy   2023 Mar 16, 4:59pm  

When you buy gold, do you get the gold or just a piece of paper saying you have gold? If it's a piece of paper then it's not much of a hedge against anything.
38   AD   2025 Aug 17, 12:45am  

Onvacation says






.

not surprised as silver has been beaten down since 2011

maybe crypto investors and gold bugs are shifting some money to silver

and crypto may have crowded out or taken the steam out of the silver market, with Bitcoin coming on scene around 2010

.
39   Onvacation   2025 Sep 2, 4:36pm  

Silver over $40 an ounce now.


AD says

crypto may have crowded out or taken the steam out of the silver market, with Bitcoin coming on scene around 2010

Crypto is easier to store.
40   AD   2025 Sep 2, 6:31pm  

Onvacation says


Crypto is easier to store.


yes, I bought 600 shares of Fidelity BTC exchange traded fund (ticker FBTC) when it first came out and BTC was around $60,000

I own about an equivalent of 53% of one BTC through FBTC

that is easier than storing in a bank safety deposit box a bunch of silver eagles

or can just conveniently buy silver through a silver ETF like the ticker SLV

.
41   AD   2025 Sep 2, 10:05pm  

https://moneyweek.com/investments/silver-and-other-precious-metals/is-now-a-good-time-to-invest-in-silver

Is silver worth investing in?

Is silver worth investing in?
As well as the industries above that have traditionally driven silver demand, Ash also highlights three “boom industries” to which silver is particularly relevant:[ ](https://moneyweek.com/invest.../605822/renewable-energy-boom)renewable energy (particularly photovoltaic (PV) solar panels);[ artificial intelligence (AI)](https://moneyweek.com/investments/4-ai-stocks-to-invest-in), thanks to its use in wiring, connectors and switches; and [defence](https://moneyweek.com/.../defence-stocks-rise-as-uk-faces...), for the same reasons.

The rise of these industries is, potentially, contributing towards an imbalance of supply and demand for silver which should, over the medium term, be positive for the silver price, and make silver well worth investing in.

According to The Silver Institute, between 2016 and 2024 total annual demand for silver increased from 993.3 million ounces to 1.16 billion. Over the same period, supply fell from 1.06 billion ounces to 1.02 billion. In other words, where there was a surplus eight years ago, there is now a deficit.

The boom industries are the main drivers of increasing demand. Total industrial silver demand increased from 491 million ounces in 2015 to a record 680.5 million ounces in 2024, and that number is expected to jump by 9% to 711 million ounces in 2024.

Electronics, particularly PV solar panels, is the largest driver of increasing industrial silver demand.

One thing to keep in mind when considering investing in silver, though, is its[ volatility](https://moneyweek.com/glossary/volatility).

Futures and options speculators call it “the devil’s metal”, says Ash, on account of its propensity to make sudden, sharp moves just as they think they’ve figured it out.

“That's less of a risk for investors trading physical[ bullion](https://moneyweek.com/invest.../gold/how-to-buy-gold-bullion) at spot prices, but its volatility is still significant,” says Ash. “While that can bring opportunities, it can also leave you nursing losses for extended periods of time.”
42   SunnyvaleCA   2025 Sep 3, 1:43am  

If you're thinking of buying gold or silver funds like GLD, SLV, the iShares, etc., please be weary of potential complexities in tax filings. Also, tax entanglements with foreign-traded securities. At the very least, you might consider trading in an IRA to at least avoid some of the paperwork... maybe.

Also, although those funds are convenient and maybe OK for speculation, they also may be plundered when the SHTF.
43   HeadSet   2025 Sep 3, 8:25am  

AD says

Is silver worth investing in?

You spelled "speculate" wrong.
44   AD   2025 Sep 5, 8:31pm  

HeadSet says

AD says


Is silver worth investing in?

You spelled "speculate" wrong.


silver is a commodity that is very useful unless it gets replaced for other applications like Pentagon weapon systems, electrical equipment, solar panels, etc

it has tangible value, granted that makes its market a target for manipulation such as by governments which do not want to see silver increasing that much in price due to the economic impacts such as on renewable energy projects
.
45   HeadSet   2025 Sep 6, 2:53pm  

AD says

silver is a commodity that is very useful

No doubt. But buying silver to hold onto hoping for a price increase is speculating, just as it would be for undeveloped land. Side note, my BIL is a retiring dentist and has a huge collection of dental xrays form his and another dentist's practice. Each negative has a small but recoverable amount of silver so he is extracting the silver currently. Local laws prohibit him from just throwing out the negatives.
46   stereotomy   2025 Sep 8, 4:21am  




Gold is more than keeping up with silver.
47   rocketjoe79   2025 Oct 4, 5:30pm  

Are gold and silver in bubbles, and is this market manipulation?
I have a friend (no joke) who's buying - when do they get off the merry-go-round?
48   AD   2025 Oct 4, 9:47pm  

Gold/Silver Ratio – Long-Term Historical Trend from GuruFocus

As of 2025-10-03, the Gold/Silver Ratio stands at 81.36, which is above its long-term historical range of 59.

Over the past 20 years, the gold/silver ratio has reached a high of 123.07 in 2020-03-19 and a low of 31.48 in 2011-04-28. The average (mean) ratio during this period is approximately 70.2 with a standard deviation (σ) of about 14.34, placing the gold/silver ratio 1σ range between 55.86 and 84.54.

As of 2025-10-03, the Gold/Silver Ratio is trading above the +1σ level, suggesting that gold is relative to silver from a historical perspective.

Historically, when the ratio deviates beyond this range, it tends to revert toward the mean, presenting potential opportunities for investors.

So the price of silver should increase more than gold, it is now around $48 an ounce which was nearly the same price in 2011 when it last peaked. Its all time high was around $51 in 1980.
49   stereotomy   2025 Oct 5, 6:55am  

From financology.net:


Year to date (9/19/2025) returns (in dollars)

US Treasuries (GOVT) +5.44%
US stocks (VTI): +13.89%
Rest of world stocks (VXUS): +26.38%
Copper (CPER): +19.67%
Gold (IAU): +43.75%
Silver (SLV): +57.84%
Platinum (PLTM): +72.43%


Platinum was trading at less than a third of the price of gold - even with the runup, it's still less than half the price of gold.
50   PeopleUnited   2025 Oct 5, 8:09am  

rocketjoe79 says

Are gold and silver in bubbles, and is this market manipulation?
I have a friend (no joke) who's buying - when do they get off the merry-go-round?

Not a bubble. When the money that was created out of thin air bounces around long enough, it comes to rest at the feet of those who own real assets like precious metals, and land.
51   AD   2025 Oct 7, 8:37pm  

Ray Dalio, founder of one of the world's largest hedge funds, believes investors should allocate as much as 15% of their portfolios to gold.
52   Maga_Chaos_Monkey   2025 Oct 7, 9:03pm  

I really really wished I bought some gold before it popped. Oh well.

AD says

Ray Dalio, founder of one of the world's largest hedge funds, believes investors should allocate as much as 15% of their portfolios to gold


As does Danielle DiMartino Booth but I think she claimed that she herself has 20% or more. Something about her fear of China. She even made her kids learn Mandarin. This was a few years back.
53   AD   2025 Oct 7, 9:06pm  

Maga_Chaos_Monkey says

Danielle DiMartino Booth


yep

Danielle DiMartino Booth, CEO of Quill Intelligence, views China as an economic rival with an ongoing "economic cold war" with the US. She closely monitors China's economic data, identifying weaknesses and potential spillover risks for the global economy.

Danielle DiMartino Booth is bullish on gold, viewing it as a critical safe-haven asset in a volatile economic and geopolitical climate. The former Federal Reserve insider sees mounting systemic risks that support gold's historic rally, including economic weakness, rising US debt, central bank policy missteps, and geopolitical tensions.
54   Misc   2025 Oct 7, 9:22pm  

Gold is up about 60% year over year. Asset bubbles always go further and higher than reasonable people think possible. That's because reasonable people don't fully grasp the CRAZY of people living in the bubble. Most gold is traded in commodity accounts. In the US, our commodity exchanges let people put down about 5% of the contract's value. This is about $1500 down for a $34k contract. I dunno what foreign exchanges require.

After the Great Depression, we limited stock margin ability to 2:1. With gold you can go 20:1. The sheer amount of borrowed money tied to gold contracts is stupendous.

What could possibly go wrong ???
55   AD   2025 Oct 7, 10:24pm  

Misc says

Gold is up about 60% year over year. Asset bubbles always go further and higher than reasonable people think possible. That's because reasonable people don't fully grasp the CRAZY of people living in the bubble. Most gold is traded in commodity accounts. In the US, our commodity exchanges let people put down about 5% of the contract's value. This is about $1500 down for a $34k contract. I dunno what foreign exchanges require.

After the Great Depression, we limited stock margin ability to 2:1. With gold you can go 20:1. The sheer amount of borrowed money tied to gold contracts is stupendous.

What could possibly go wrong ???


How do you value it to understand how inflated it is and how big the bubble is ? One way is that gold will return to the mean as far as historically (at least 15 year period) returned a real return of 4% annually ?

Gold now is around $4000 an ounce and its last all time high was $1780 in October 2012 until it started to increase by summer 2020.

So it only increased by about 6.5% annually from October 2012 to present day; and its real return is around 4% annually based on 2.5% annual inflation rate.

Below table shows annual changes in gold prices for last 50 years.

Year Annual Return for Gold (%)
1975 −24.20%
1976 −3.96%
1977 +20.43%
1978 +29.17%
1979 +120.57%
1980 +29.61%
1981 −32.76%
1982 +11.75%
1983 −14.99%
1984 −18.95%
1985 +6.17%
1986 +19.54%
1987 +24.46%
1988 −15.69%
1989 −2.23%
1990 −3.69%
1991 −8.56%
1992 −5.71%
1993 +17.64%
1994 −2.17%
1995 +0.98%
1996 −4.65%
1997 −22.21%
1998 +0.57%
1999 +0.54%
2000 −6.06%
2001 +1.41%
2002 +23.96%
2003 +21.74%
2004 +4.40%
2005 +17.77%
2006 +23.92%
2007 +31.59%
2008 +3.97%
2009 +25.04%
2010 +30.60%
2011 +7.80%
2012 +8.69%
2013 −27.61%
2014 −0.44%
2015 −11.61%
2016 +8.62%
2017 +9.54%
2018 −1.06%
2019 +18.28%
2020 +25.75%
2021 −3.73%
2022 +2.08%
2023 +13.14%
2024 +27.20%
2025 (Forecast) +39.09%
56   Misc   2025 Oct 7, 11:14pm  

The $850 per ounce in January 1980 when adjusted for inflation was just topped in September of this year. Let's see how stupid people can be this time around.
57   Misc   2025 Oct 7, 11:32pm  

The CEO of Newmont mining (largest gold miner in the world) bailed a few days ago (once you quit, insider sales rules don't apply). Guess he wanted to cash in now instead of waiting for a better price.

... but sure 15% of your portfolio at this price....what could go wrong ???
58   AD   2025 Oct 7, 11:52pm  

Misc says


The $850 per ounce in January 1980 when adjusted for inflation was just topped in September of this year. Let's see how stupid people can be this time around.


Yeah WTF happened to gold by just examining 1980 to present day as it only has appreciated by about 3.5% annually during this period.

Yeah Mark Bristow, CEO of Barrick (rival to Newmont Mining), also resigned recently along with Newmont Mining's CEO. I wonder too if these CEOs were motivated by "take the money and run" (reference: Steve Miller Band).

Same mindset goes for several or many working within Enron like Ken Harrison, Joseph Hirko and Lou Pai before it crashed.

I read Newmont has a new female CEO.
.
59   AD   2025 Oct 8, 12:11am  

Just heard on Coast to Coast AM the guest Gerald Celente. He's been on many times before. Celente said gold is going up because investors losing faith in dollar as far as US debt growth.

I wonder if Trump is trying to at least "bend the curve" and show very little to no growth in US debt over the next few years and how that will effect gold prices as well as other alternatives like Bitcoin.

Congressional Budget Office – Budget and Economic Outlook 2025–2035 forecasts a $1.9 trillion deficit for calendar year 2025 compared to a $2 trillion deficit for calendar year 2024. I read Biden regime was spending at an extraordinary rate in November and December 2024 such as with grant money.
60   Misc   2025 Oct 8, 12:38am  

AD says


Congressional Budget Office – Budget and Economic Outlook 2025–2035 forecasts a $1.9 trillion deficit for calendar year 2025 compared to a $2 trillion deficit for calendar year 2024. I read Biden regime was spending at an extraordinary rate in November and December 2024 such as with grant money.


If the Fed ain't able to lower the mortgage rate and get some additional borrowing going through the system, Trump will be forced to send out tariff rebate checks to keep the economy from going to shitsville. That'll boost up the deficit.
61   AD   2025 Oct 8, 12:59am  

Misc says

Fed ain't able to lower the mortgage rate


Their monetary policies hopefully keep government-reported annual inflation no more than 2.7% which should help with lowering the 10 Year Treasury and mortgage rates. Usually the mortgage rates are around 1.75% greater than the 10 Year Treasury.

Mortgage bond traders now want about 6% for a VA and FHA mortgage, which are the safest of mortgages.

Keep annual inflation no more than 2.5% for 6 consecutive months and that may help to lower those mortgage rates.

Schwab has a money market paying around 4% while annual inflation is around 2.7%. Safe and easy money.
62   AD   2025 Oct 8, 1:31am  

Rich Dad Poor Dad author is promoting silver.

.......................................................................

Robert Kiyosaki says this 1 asset will surge 400% in a year — and he begs investors not to miss its ‘explosion’

https://www.aol.com/finance/robert-kiyosaki-says-1-asset-111100864.html
63   Misc   2025 Oct 8, 3:03am  

Yes, silver could/should trade higher, but it is the most manipulated of the metals. All the financial markets are heavily manipulated, but with silver, the bullion banks simply get together and have the exchanges increase the margin requirements for the silver contracts. They know their customer positions and have an idea of how many forced sales will occur by increasing the margin requirements. Price drops are steep and immediate. That and given the massive short positions the banks are willing to put on makes any massive price increase up to the whims of the banks.

Governments will also intervene if prices get too high. It has industrial uses that are not easily changed.
64   Misc   2025 Oct 8, 3:22am  

Funny how Musk's audit of Fort Knox kinda well you know went the way of the Epstein files.
66   Onvacation   2025 Oct 8, 11:21am  

Silver broke $49 an ounce today.

I suspect it will exceed all time highs very soon.
67   AD   2025 Oct 8, 11:42am  

Misc says

Funny how Musk's audit of Fort Knox kinda well you know went the way of the Epstein files.


Fort Knox reportedly has 147.3 million ounces of gold, which is around $589 billion.

That is barely enough to fund Medicaid for one year and is less than 2% of the annual economy based on GDP.

UK's Prime Minister Gordon Brown sold about 60% of Britain's gold reserves between 1999 and 2002. The sale was intended to diversify the UK's reserves away from gold, which was seen as volatile and not yielding interest payments at the time. The sale was controversial because it occurred near the bottom of a 20-year low for gold prices, and its value has since risen significantly.

.
68   AD   2025 Oct 8, 12:35pm  

Misc says


Yes, silver could/should trade higher, but it is the most manipulated of the metals.


A lot of industrial uses for silver especially for electronics and also solar panels. Guvmints likely have an interest to keep silver price down.

Examining the galvanic series chart, silver is on top and zinc (a metal that is most likely to corrode hence used for sacrificial anode applications).

And naturally gold is above silver on the chart.
.
69   Onvacation   2025 Oct 9, 11:59am  

Onvacation says

Silver broke $49 an ounce today.

I suspect it will exceed all time highs very soon.

Silver price hit all time high today.

Adjusted for inflation it still has a way to go to match the Hunt brothers price from last century.
70   Patrick   2025 Oct 10, 9:58am  

https://www.coffeeandcovid.com/p/gold-fingered-friday-october-10-2025


What if, for political cover against accusations about inflation —which Biden denied was happening at all— the US government manipulated the metals markets? That would explain both why metal prices remained stable while the cost of everything else increased, and why other countries were buying so much of it: by keeping the prices artificially low, Biden was basically giving it away.

That’s not a tinfoil helmet conspiracy theory. There’s a long, well-documented tradition of governments intervening overtly and covertly in commodity and currency markets when it suited their fiscal or political needs. Indeed, before Bretton Woods, the price of gold was artificially kept at $35 an ounce worldwide and everybody knew it.

During and after the 2008 financial crisis, Western central banks quietly lent and swapped bullion through ‘bullion banks’ to create a synthetic supply. Analysts complained this kept spot prices artificially low while balance sheets ballooned.

So what if —and this is what I think must have happened— Trump discovered Biden’s covert gold stabilization program and pulled the plug? Let see if any we can connect any dots.

Remember when, early this year, Trump was noisily threatening to audit Fort Knox? And then the story magically disappeared, nevermore to be seen? ...

Around the same time, an idea floated through the trade press —I covered it— that the US could massively increase its financial stability or create a sovereign wealth fund simply, by re-pricing its own gold at current market rates. ...

Gold Observer reminded us that on February 3, 2025, President Trump signed an executive order requiring a sovereign wealth fund be created within one year. Standing right next to him when he signed the order was Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, who told reporters, “We’re going to monetize the asset side of the U.S. balance sheet for the American people.”

What asset?

One asset that America owns is 8,100 tons of gold (262 million ounces) — officially valued at only $42.22 an ounce, a 1973 accounting relic. Twice before, the US has repriced its gold to instantly create new wealth: once in 1972 when the official gold price was raised from $35 to $38, and again in 1973 from $38 to $42.22 an ounce. ...

For years, while Washington denied inflation and quietly stabilized gold, foreign central banks were the ones cashing in— buying American bullion on the cheap, storing the real wealth offshore, and leaving U.S. taxpayers holding the empty bag. Repricing gold at today’s market rate wouldn’t just acknowledge inflation; it would end another foreign subsidy.

America first.

Letting gold float freely, then marking it on the national balance sheet to that honest price, would flip the trade: the U.S. would capture the windfall instead of exporting it. The flow of gold would reverse, foreign vaults would stop filling, and for once, the balance of monetary power might tilt back toward the people who originally mined, minted, and defended it in the first place.

If the price does float to $6,000 an ounce (or more), and if Trump intelligently prices America’s hoard to that more rational market price, one single corrective accounting entry could instantly flood a sovereign wealth fund with $1.56 trillion dollars. That’s not stimulus, not borrowing, not money-printing — just marking reality to market.

Now imagine that happening early-to-mid next year, right before the midterm election season really gets underway. And then imagine that Trump says he needs a Republican supermajority in Congress to give all that value back to citizens in their new sovereign wealth fund?
72   Onvacation   2025 Oct 11, 7:17am  

Patrick says

Twice before, the US has repriced its gold to instantly create new wealth: once in 1972 when the official gold price was raised from $35 to $38, and again in 1973 from $38 to $42.22 an ounce. ...

Three times; FDR confiscated gold and then repriced it at the beginning of the depression
73   Onvacation   2025 Oct 14, 8:09pm  

Silver price seems to be settling in at all time highs.

Is $50+ per ounce the new normal?


74   RC2006   2025 Oct 14, 8:40pm  

Onvacation says

Silver price seems to be settling in at all time highs.

Is $50+ per ounce the new normal?




Yes its insane I keep thinking of selling but all hard assets keep going up.

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