Brave AI:
If silver reaches $75 per ounce, some banks could face significant financial trouble, particularly those with large short positions in silver futures. A report from October 2024 indicated that five U.S. banks were at risk of billions in losses due to their substantial short positions as silver prices surged past $33.60 per ounce. The concentration of these short positions has raised concerns about market integrity and the potential for a short squeeze, especially given the structural deficit in silver supply, where global consumption has consistently exceeded mine production for over five years.
The paper silver market, which relies on futures contracts rather than physical delivery, has been described as a system where banks can manipulate prices by selling paper contracts they may not be able to fulfill. With industrial demand from electric vehicles, solar panels, and electronics continuing to grow, and physical silver inventories in major vaults reportedly at decade-low levels, the risk of a delivery crisis increases. If silver prices rise sharply to $75 or higher, banks holding short positions may be forced to buy back contracts at much higher prices, potentially leading to massive losses. Some analysts have warned that this could trigger a "short squeeze" that could destabilize the market and even threaten the solvency of certain financial institutions.
Furthermore, the current gold-silver price ratio is significantly higher than the historical in-ground ratio, suggesting silver is undervalued and poised for a substantial price correction. If the market recognizes the growing supply deficit and the inability of the paper market to meet physical demand, a rapid price surge could occur, exacerbating losses for banks with large short exposures.
AI-generated answer. Please verify critical facts.
How about credit unions?
I did business with Well Fargo for years. Always had some money in a savings account. Wells Fargo paid pennies a year in interest on account. What did I know?
But a few years ago I changed over to a credit union that pays me $200 dollars a month on same money. All those years I was getting ripped off by WF.
Yep, they pay some interest but not like it is used to be in the past.
Credit unions don't speculate with silver Futures and such. Only house loans and car loans to the members. Yours might be different,but that's usually what they do. They should be just fine,unless your local community goes broke,and then you should still have time.
Thank you