Silver Squeeze Explained in 2 Minutes!

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by Mkm5, Apr 25, 2021.

  1. Razz

    Razz Critical Thinker

    Relative to silver it did. You said 1 silver quarter would buy 1 gallon of gas in 1974. In 2021 1 silver quarter will buy 1.5 gallons of gas. 50 percent more gas for the same amount of silver.
     
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  3. -jeffB

    -jeffB Greshams LEO Supporter

    It's almost as though both commodities fluctuate in value. Along with all others.
     
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  4. medoraman

    medoraman Supporter! Supporter

    Who would have thunk it, huh? Its also almost like if you put money in a treasury bills, it roughly equates in purchasing power with said commodities over time as well.

    What a dang coincidence.
     
  5. longarm

    longarm Well-Known Member

    What amazes me is how many here support the Welfare/Nanny state that wants to squeeze every nickel they can out of the little guy to give to the ne'er do wells that don't work.
     
  6. longarm

    longarm Well-Known Member

    Yes, against a devalued currency. The value of silver/gold didn't magically shoot up during those 40 yrs. but the purchasing power of the currency dropped.
     
  7. medoraman

    medoraman Supporter! Supporter

    Yes, our currency devalues every year. Its intentional. Low inflation usually produces the best economic outcome. That is why all countries on earth strive to generate low inflation in their prices every year. The goal, really, is for inflation to be around the tax free government bond rate. That way, citizens can invest in government bonds and maintain their purchasing power long term, hence my T Bill comment. However, this is why I HATE capital gains taxes unless indexed to inflation. They are taxing inflation THEY are causing.

    If you think holding a $100 bill is the way you maintain purchasing power, you are doing it wrong. Its not DESIGNED to work that way. If you want that, buy government bonds, pm, etc to maintain purchasing power.

    Having said that, I agree with you sir regarding taking from productive sectors and giving to unproductive is simply lowering everyone's standard of living, and long term will teach lazy people they can stay lazy, (not commenting on people who truly need help, of course we help them). Like most things in life its a matter of degree, and that line has now truly been crossed....
     
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  8. longarm

    longarm Well-Known Member

  9. longarm

    longarm Well-Known Member

  10. medoraman

    medoraman Supporter! Supporter

    Just like pm has gone up and down over time, (remember 2011 versus 2016?) I am talking about over time. I am sure I can come up with a list of OTHER items going down the last year.

    Do 10, 20, or 30 year comparisons and show me how they are "so far off".

    Sure, it COULD be "different this time", but in my lifetime anytime anyone says this to me it makes the hair stand up on the back of my head, because it never was.
     
  11. longarm

    longarm Well-Known Member

  12. longarm

    longarm Well-Known Member

  13. longarm

    longarm Well-Known Member

  14. longarm

    longarm Well-Known Member

  15. longarm

    longarm Well-Known Member

    Here's some of what I added to the stack last year, as you can see I buy US coins.
    stack2.jpg yesIdo.jpg
     
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  16. daniel a DiBiasio

    daniel a DiBiasio Well-Known Member

    so true! its very frustrating with all the stimulus and money printing going on that gold,silver aren't exploding.i lost count of how many lawsuits jp morgan has had against them.
     
  17. Mkm5

    Mkm5 Well-Known Member

    Welp, there have been some really interesting perspectives on silver here, thank you folks for sharing!

    I'm still unsettled about where the future will take us, but I know one thing for certain.

    I really like silver intrinsically, whether it's a historically learned phenomenon or just something I picked up along this journey through life, like collecting rocks or old bottles.

    I sleep better at night with a little reserve outside of the system, and then the next day, well rested, I can continue to enjoy this hobby/habit by learning and reading and collecting the shiny metal and listening to the sweet sound of a canvas bag with a pile of silver inside! IMG_20210502_202119.jpg IMG_20210502_202824.jpg
     
    longarm and Copper lover like this.
  18. TheFinn

    TheFinn Well-Known Member

    Silver and Gold don't burn, warp or rot. They are a store of value until the need arises to exchange them for lumber or steak.
     
    longarm and Copper lover like this.
  19. Mkm5

    Mkm5 Well-Known Member

    Silver or steak, now that's a conundrum!
     
    longarm likes this.
  20. longarm

    longarm Well-Known Member

    Just acquire as much as possible while the price is low.
     
  21. medoraman

    medoraman Supporter! Supporter

    No doubt, but they are subject to being stolen.

    The point, however, was the comparison in the original video saying a board now costs more than an ounce of silver, cutely saying its cheaper than something "that grows on trees". My point is there have ALWAYS been boards more expensive than an ounce of silver throughout history. I am not aware of any period in human history where a board might not be worth more than an ounce of silver. Therefore, it was a red herring argument, irrelevant.
     
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