30 bars per skid, that's 30,000 ounces of silver per skid. I see at least 30 skids, there is no shortage of silver just sellers trying to tell you that.
My original thought, referred to in the quoted post as a few years prior (so around 2009/10) I was more specific in my timeframe and I still believe it's headed sub $10. Lets see if I can dig it up... It's cyclical and predictable based on its history.
I've said it before, but let me say it again...in case anyone missed it... There are ONLY two (2) things that affect the price of ANY commodity... 1. Supply/Demand 2. The relative value of its underlying (denominated) currency Given a stable supply/demand, commodity prices act like bonds...interest rates rise, commodities fall. That's all there is to it. Any change in the price of a commodity, that deviates from the inverse relationship to it's denominated currency, represents the change in the supply/demand dynamic. It cracks me up when I see wild upside PM predictions in a rising interest rate, low inflation environment. Sorry...ain't happening!
Any proof of that????? Not a lick, in fact Silver has acted exactly like Yak both described and predicted. Exactly like it should have, exactly as expected. If folks spent a bit more time leaning the fundamentals, instead of wasting their time reading all the total garbage that folks like zerohedge puts out, they probably wouldn't have lost their shirt.
It's just above $14 per ounce now! I think it's going the opposite direction from what the OP originally predicted.
I'm not sure I'll be alive that long. It goes up and it goes down. $250.00, I don't think so, not in my lifetime and if it did, the economy would be so bad, I'd rather not be here.
Of course it will go to $250 and past. The question most would like answered is when. I remember my great aunt telling me that bread will someday cost a dollar a loaf. I remember this crystal clear. I was incredulous. There was no way that could ever happen. After all, the cheap bread was 10¢ a loaf with premium brand name bread (Wonder bread here, or Strohman's, or Marhoffer's) was 30¢. The conversation began because Marhoffer raised their big loafs to 33¢. I knew she was nuts because bread had always been this price and most certainly might rise little but a dollar a loaf? Never. All this took place in the summer that America had men walking on the moon. Has anyone paid $5 for a loaf of premium bread?
Very interesting responses!! I've heard and read all of the forecasts for more than 20 years now and I'd be thrilled if silver made it to about $50/oz and DIDN'T result in massive worldwide sell offs...simply meaning, it stayed at that level as a correction and fluctuated as little as possible.... My modest $150.00/month purchases of silver bullion would then seem like a great idea, instead of the questionable one it appears at the moment....either way, my purchases will continue for the indefinite future.
With silver heading to $10. these are the times to be buying. The problem is the large premiums sellers are charging over spot.