Re: Premium on Junk Silver Narrowing
[quote=Starving Steve;97545]
With all due respect to iTulip, I'll be nice. No one who has ever actually opened a $1000 bag of US silver would call it collectable. It's holed, dented, worn and otherwise damaged in a way that it is no longer collectable. As these bags have moved through collectors hands over the last 7-8 years, fewer and fewer decent coins have survived.
This is simply untrue for 90% silver. 40% US silver traded at near zero premium when silver approached $4 but has been revived as silver value has moved up.
Investing here may not be the best advise unless one has no exposure to precious metals.
I don't even know where to begin with this so I won't go there.
Sorry, would you like to try again? Almost all of the silver used in traditional photography is recycled. And do you know how much of that demand came from photography in the first place? Go crazy on this point, it's an easy one to net-search.
Yikes, you're a one trick pony. Back to the eco-frauds, (I'm having the tee-shirt made...sorrry no royalties). If i can offer one piece of advise, there's no conspiracy worth following, the conspirators are idiots. The game is so much more complex than that.
[quote=Starving Steve;97545]
I like junk silver, especially good mixes of dates and denominations of junk silver, because silver coin is historic. So it is quite collectable.
Junk silver also tends to trade near its bullion content, and for many years, until the current silver insanity, junk silver traded well under silver content.
As for silver as an investment, the only reason why I like silver at this price is because the idiots running the world's central banks--- especially the idiots running the U.S. Federal Reserve--- are determined to inflate their way out of any mess.
As for notions that silver has a great industrial demand, those ideas are laughable. Silver is in huge surplus, especially since silver is a by-product (sp?)of copper mining. Also silver is a by-product of lead mining. Also silver is a by-product of gold mining; in fact, silver is a by-product of just about every mining. As a by-product, silver is produced free-of-charge.
And the demand for silver is gone because of digital photography.
But stupidity always wins, so the central bankers will get their inflation, and silver is headed up, not a lot, but up. It could double in value.... Anything will turn-out to be better than owning paper money, especially Bernanke's play money in the long-run.
We have to get rid of the economists and the ecologists. That is the bottom-line in this discussion.
We have to get rid of the economists and the ecologists. That is the bottom-line in this discussion.
Comment