Royal Bank of Scotland Says "Sell Everything"....

Discussion in 'US Coins Forum' started by keemao, Jan 12, 2016.

  1. Paddy54

    Paddy54 Well-Known Member

    No worries as I come here to discuss coins and my hobby.
    That said post whatever you're on iggy. :)
     
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  3. Morgandude11

    Morgandude11 As long as it's Silver, I'm listening

    This is political, and we don't discuss politics here. This is a coin forum.
     
  4. desertgem

    desertgem Senior Errer Collecktor Supporter

    This was posted in the US Coin forum rather than general discussion or a more logical area and then we still have people who can't seem to stop the political ranting?? Posts removed , infractions given, read the rules more carefully. Thanks.
    Jim
     
  5. baseball21

    baseball21 Well-Known Member

    Exactly. And if something does happen, don't panic sell without assessing the situation first. A lot of things rebounded and would have recovered in the stock market but a lot of people locked in their losses panic selling when it had already taken a huge drop. Some things were worth dumping, many were not. There's never a one size fits all approach to things.
     
    rzage likes this.
  6. TJ1952

    TJ1952 Well-Known Member

    Got it. Thanks.
     
  7. Brett_in_Sacto

    Brett_in_Sacto Well-Known Member

    Actually this would have been closer to appropriate in the bullion forum - where we're slicing and dicing the economy every day along with bullion and other commodities - sans politics. (as much as we can sans politics anyhow)
     
  8. Skyman

    Skyman Well-Known Member

    Paul M. likes this.
  9. scottishmoney

    scottishmoney Buh bye

    A company that took the dole from the British taxpayer as a result of their mismanagement.
     
  10. justafarmer

    justafarmer Senior Member

    The World wide glut of oil is not going to dry up soon.

    Even at $75.00 oil green alternatives are not competitive to oil. To really make in-roads into mainstream energy required a significant carbon tax to artificially inflate cost of carbon. With the price of oil where it is now makes the carbon tax required for competitive alternatives beyond what the general population is willing to bear.

    Fracked/shale/tar sand oil production at this time is still cheaper than alternatives but is right at the cusp where a significant percentage of the population would endure a carbon tax for cleaner alternatives. Well with about 10 more years of RD and breakthroughs that make production of alternatives more cost efficient. Plus continued blockage of infra-structure investments that would reduce cost of production of these oil reserves. Such as the Keystone pipeline.

    If a carbon tax takes hold - oil producers would still face lowering oil prices to to remain the cheaper energy to prevent alternatives from grabbing market share. But they would be funding their own demise because the tax revenue generated would be rolled into alternatives as a subsidy. Allowing alternatives to lower their cost of production.

    Anyway what it boils down to is the Oil producing countries will continue over supply depressing oil prices and get $25.00 to prevent the other sources from eroding their market share as quickly. $25.00 for as much oil as one can produce is better than getting stranded in the future with a large reserve of a resource that has no value.

    That is my take on it.
     
  11. ToughCOINS

    ToughCOINS Dealer Member Moderator

    The debt is only unsustainable as long as interest rates make the payments unacceptable.

    Right now, the debt service is manageable, but only because we're paying so little to borrow the money.

    Just wait until the Fed raises rates to stave off a global deflationary depression . . . that is when the inflation kicks in, and the debt service balloons. Everyone is focused on the raising of rates at all . . . what they should be examining is how much our annual debt service will increase year-to-year to get a feel for when they must "turbocharge" the presses. That's more closely related to the redemption of Treasuries by lenders who feel they are carrying too much risk for the interest currently being paid.

    Right now, it's quite a balancing act . . . trying to prop up the global economy while minimizing inflation . . . one eventually has to give.

    Believers in ongoing deflation should be in cash . . . believers in a near term reversal to inflation should be in commodities, land, etc.
     
  12. SuperDave

    SuperDave Free the Cartwheels!

    The bullion market is just the same as any similar market, far more driven by emotion than any "expert" seems to factor. Unless it's somebody attempting to drive prices down for profit, because what this makes me want to do is plan to start buying, not plan to sell. :)
     
    Brett_in_Sacto likes this.
  13. willieboyd2

    willieboyd2 First Class Poster

    [​IMG]

    Are you selling your crystal ball?

    Don't be silly, girl!

    :)
     
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