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<p>[QUOTE="InfleXion, post: 1185708, member: 29012"]Check out my post on the "Silver To Settle In The $28.00 Range?" thread. I would just repeat it, but that seems tacky. Basically my impression is that silver will stay pretty stagnant until QE2 ends at which point we will see a drop to the next most opportune buying scenario. We may see $40 before then, but I'm definitely anticipating a drop before things take off as they typically do the second half of the year. After that I think $40 will be considered a bargain. </p><p><br /></p><p>The housing market is pretty clear that we are not near the end of the recession, and I also think "measured inflation" has a long way to go to catch up to real inflation (money supply growth exceeding growth of goods and services). A lot of that excess liquidity is just sitting in a big wig's account somewhere, but if it ever hits the mainstream I would expect the impact to show. </p><p><br /></p><p>I am of the mindset of buy (physical) as much as you can afford to lose as often as you can, and never sell. Even if it goes down from when you bought, it's not a loss unless you sell. Silver is a bumpy ride, but I think all PM's will continue to rise over the long haul. Sure you could sell on the tops if you can peg them to maximize profit, but if a shortage pops up or a disaster happens or it becomes illegal or [fill in the blank], you may not be able to resupply. I measure in ounces, not dollars. Just my 4 cents =)[/QUOTE]</p><p><br /></p>
[QUOTE="InfleXion, post: 1185708, member: 29012"]Check out my post on the "Silver To Settle In The $28.00 Range?" thread. I would just repeat it, but that seems tacky. Basically my impression is that silver will stay pretty stagnant until QE2 ends at which point we will see a drop to the next most opportune buying scenario. We may see $40 before then, but I'm definitely anticipating a drop before things take off as they typically do the second half of the year. After that I think $40 will be considered a bargain. The housing market is pretty clear that we are not near the end of the recession, and I also think "measured inflation" has a long way to go to catch up to real inflation (money supply growth exceeding growth of goods and services). A lot of that excess liquidity is just sitting in a big wig's account somewhere, but if it ever hits the mainstream I would expect the impact to show. I am of the mindset of buy (physical) as much as you can afford to lose as often as you can, and never sell. Even if it goes down from when you bought, it's not a loss unless you sell. Silver is a bumpy ride, but I think all PM's will continue to rise over the long haul. Sure you could sell on the tops if you can peg them to maximize profit, but if a shortage pops up or a disaster happens or it becomes illegal or [fill in the blank], you may not be able to resupply. I measure in ounces, not dollars. Just my 4 cents =)[/QUOTE]
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