POLL: Silver Run-up Reality Check
baccaruda
Posts: 2,588 ✭✭
There's lots of talk about silver lately and why not? It's sat in stagnation for 15 years now. There's also a lot of "crazy talk" about $50 and $100 silver again.
I, like most of you probably, hold a lot of silver. Junk silver, SAEs etc.
The question is, at what spot price would you sell your silver coins strictly because of their silver content?
I, like most of you probably, hold a lot of silver. Junk silver, SAEs etc.
The question is, at what spot price would you sell your silver coins strictly because of their silver content?
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Russ, NCNE
Go BIG or GO HOME. ©Bill
$10/oz, $20/oz...... I don't own enough to make a big deal out of it. When I get ready for a free fishing trip then I'll sell it. I bought a slug after 9/11, when oddly enough the price fell to like $4.20.
It's not like I have $50,000 worth of silver sitting around awaiting $10/oz..........
one piece of advice: never sell anything going up and never
buy anything going down.
Please check out my eBay auctions!
My WLH Short Set Registry Collection
1. Is the price currently increasing, decreasing or sitting more or less constant?
2. Which coins am I considering selling for melt- is it the two rolls of silver eagles that I bought purely for their silver content, are they the silver eagle date set that I have in an album, are they the junk silver bags of roosevelts and washingtons, is it the circulated set of washingtons in 2x2's in an album or is it the uncirculated peace dollar set?
I think that many of us have some extra silver that has been bought for its silver content. The price at which we each should sell should not be an arbitrary price point, but instead decided based on analysis of the market on a week to week basis. This silver will be easy to sell for spot.
Likewise many of us have high grade sets, either raw or slabbed, whose value does not depend on the silver content, so these would never sell for spot.
The tricky coins are those sets of circulated silver coins sitting in folders, 2x2's or dansco albums. Any coin by itself is not that special, but a complete set of silver roosevelts, washingtons or franklins is something that you enjoy owning. It is the sale of these coins for melt that will try collector's hearts if silver continues to rise.
BG - sounds like a guy who knows how to make an account balance get larger......
Eventually silver will break out and I intend to sell on the way up a little at a time.
I'm not an extreme hard assets, SHTF scenario kind of guy. I just balance out my portfolio for the long term. I've got a considerable amount invested in paper (mutuals through my 401(k) and IRA). Silver is the heavy stuff on the other end of the balance beam. It's about balance.
--Severian the Lame
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and wait for developements.
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">my registry set
www.AlanBestBuys.com
www.VegasBestBuys.com
offered me a 100 oz. bar(s) @ $805.00. I thought it was a fair price. But I had my eye on that 92S.
I agree that lines of resistance exist at $13, $18, and $27
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Have you guys taken your medicine today.
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<< <i>Most of that silver is produced as a by-product in the mining for copper, lead or zinc. Since it's a by-product, it's not very responsive to price changes. >>
BTW
who says the the price has gone up? True in terms of dollars. Has the price gone up significantly in YEN or EURO in the last 5 years? as much or more than inflation?? or has the dollar simply gone down.
the coin store. I did not have a lot of money and that was my way of
investing. They had to be in the good books though (with the slides).
I was also paying 20% over face for circulated silver and 30% over
face for uncirculated silver. It was a tad bit more than dealers but
It wasn't like I was buying a ton of it. A little later I bid on a
$1000 dollar lot at a credit union (it had been used for collaterol.
I won the lot at 6n times face as I recall. My boss and a friend
took half of it at bid (that was our deal) and I sold the rest at 7
times face. It turns out that after counting the bac there was
actually $1110 with a windfall of profit as I bid a dollar amount for
the lot and not so much per. I had to sell the half because as I
said I was not a dealer and just piddling around.
As silver went up I couldn't resist selling some on the way up. It
seemed the logical thing to do and by this time I was kinda dealing
in coins.
When the price of silver hit the all time high the friend that bought
the 1/4 bag and I took ALL of the silver I had left which was mostly
uncirculated as I had sold NONE of the uncirculated on the way up and
took it to the local dealer at sold it ALL at 23 TIMES face yes 23
times face and believe it or not it was the actual TOP for silver
prices. The next day it started its dramatic drop. If you guys
remember ANYBODY that had a futures contract lost their #### as they
were locked in because of limit moves (no Buyers) and it took several
days before it dropped low enough to the actual demand price. NOTE:
This is futures not the physical metal itself. It was devasting and
cazused many bankruptcy's and almost the Hunt brothers.
There is an interesting article on the Kitco home page about short
sellers now that if true will see the opposite of the above happen
and the SHORT SELLERS will get BURNT.
http://www.kitco.com/ind/Hornig/apr012004.html
An interesting thought on the great silver melt was brought up
repeatedly and I think just now is coming to light (actually in the
last few years).
SO MUCH uncirculated silver was sold and melted that the actual
figures AVAILABLE of uncirculated later date silver coins may never
actually known.
So I kinda mess with silver now and I guess will sell as it goes up.
I could only be so lucky as last time and sell at the all time high
23 times face.
Jim
<< <i>Yes, but thats because they get all the silver they need without going out to mine specifically for it. If the price went up 10-20x do you think they might start looking again. >>
Certainly, but how much will they find when they go looking for it? How much will it cost to mine it (if the ore isn't rich it could cost $10-$20 or more to get it out of the ground)?
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<< <i>coynclecter, you do realize that the vast, vast majority of silver is a byproduct of mining for other metals. If memory serves me (and I'll admit it frequently doesn't!) there are fewer than purely silver producing mines in the world. As Warren Buffett said:
<< <i>Most of that silver is produced as a by-product in the mining for copper, lead or zinc. Since it's a by-product, it's not very responsive to price changes. >>
>>
This is exactly one of the most interesting things about this move! Silver generally
wants to move opposite of the way copper is moving since increased copper prices
will increase mine production and hence silver production.
Copper, however, is doing nearly as well as silver and is approaching all time highs.
The silver bull won't be killed by copper or increased production.