Its Habbening! According to Silver Prices, at least ....
(media.greatawakening.win)
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The drop in silver prices is reflective of the loss of demand for and manufacturing of items that contain silver. It has nothing to do with its value as a currency.
Sorry, the silver market is completely rigged my fren. I was shocked when I learned how bad it is being manipulated.
Everything is rigged. I'm just saying the current price drop is due to lack of demand.
False. Demand is higher than it has been in decades, which is reflected in the insane premiums dealers are charging.
Not for demand as a currency, I'm talking about demand for industrial uses. And this dropped in demand for industrial uses is signifying a major problem across the whole market.
Possible, but it seems to be deeper than that. It's worth researching. I've been stacking a long time, so I'm biased, but I've done a crap ton of research, which is why I stack.
where do you buy from?
When risk is on, people flock to precious metals, this is historically true.
No demand? I'm thinking it good to buy @16.50 for a long term investment.
Why is it not skyrocketing then? To believe that some giant entity is going to continue to short a market that they know is going to go to the Moon and bankrupt their asses, is insane.
interesting.
So, the plot thickens: how is the lack of demand to be considered true when the market is rigged? The dislocation of the physical demand is very visible. With oil the same thing. And there is the demand for paper. Which is totally pushing price discovery into lalala-land.
There once was a State called the Soviet Union. Their economic output could not truthfully be measured as there was no price-discovery, just inflated reports on quantities.
It reminds me of the last speech Ceausescu gave .... before people put an end to his miseries ....
Demand is obvious seeing as every electric device requires silver. Unlike gold, silver is consumed for industrial use and under the rigged system we have now, it isn't profitable to recycle electronic devices for their silver. In short, silver is consumed. At some point demand for physical silver has to increase.
Sorry, I forgot to say that you are correct.
We have not seen a fair market for pretty much anything, including silver for decades, at least since the introduction of Comex.
Currently, the treasury is under attack - looks like someone keeps dumping US treasury bonds periodically, and then to stabilise he market, Fed (Cabal) has to dump stocks, cryptos, silver to buy back the treasuries.
Right now, my guess is the Cabal is dumping all its paper silver. Same happened in 2008 and it reached $9 per oz, before it shot up to $40 per oz.
I'm hoping that we hit $1000 this time. :)
If the Cabal is forced to stop their manipulation and to honour all their short positions, then yeah!
i lied, I actually hope it hits 40K per ounce, but that's because I dream big. :)
Normally, yes, but this amount of massive move is probably linked to their "market stabilisation"
Amen. Fuck the media for not reporting on this. It's fucking obvious as hell.
There has never been a fair market. Not in the entire history of the market. Not for a tiny fraction of a single second.
It is nothing but an asset transfer vehicle and has been since the very first market opened in Holland in the 17th century. That market was opened by the exact same people who opened the London Markets, and then the American Markets over two hundred years later (and the Honk Kong markets, etc.). All the same people, all the same shenanigans, all designed as an asset transfer vehicle from the people who invest, to the people who created and run the markets.
I wonder how a real honest free market looks like. I hope I get to see it in this life time.
We will build one. Once I finish my full exposure of The Machine, I intend to dedicate my life to help build one. Not that anyone will necessarily listen to me, but I do have the ear of quite a few Superstonkers, and after I put out the next part of my report (building the website right now), I think a few heads are going to explode.
In a good way.
I can't argue with you on a single point that you made. And that freaking sucks.
Mostly true. It just depends on how valuable the metal is. Stealing copper is a very lucrative business when demand is high. That's because copper exists under a less manipulated market. No one currently knows what silver is worth, but we will soon find out.