If metals skyrocket everyone will panic, sell all stocks, buy canned foods and destroy what's left of the "normal" economy. Basically, keeping metals down is the government and financial institutions' way of telling people that there is nothing to panic over. They cannot afford to let people know something is wrong with the economy, and a rapidly rising Gold/Silver would do just that.
They will keep metals down... until it is impossible for them to hide he fact that the economy is fucked. At that point the floodgates will open and the manipulation will end. By this point the top few % already hoarded all the metals so there is only an incentive to let prices rise and price out the common man.
So that would explain why not a single government out there is fighting the manipulation, they're counting on it. Look at Turkey, people got hit with a new Gold Rush and started selling assets to buy more gold. A little preview of what's about to happen in our lifetime I'm afraid. Unless we just continue to kick the can with hyperinflation and DOOM the future generations into a literal slavery,
Can anyone tell me how many ounces these silver quarters are? Are they .25 oz of .999 silver? Why is the U.S mint so bad at descriptions? >Inb4Muh5ozCoin Like the only 5oz coins they have are Women's suffrage, which helped destroy the U.S & family unit. I dont want that blood on my hands or rather in my silver stack.
I mean, yeah, that makes 100% sense. Look at the way they manipulate the market every time there is a minor down turn in economic output. of course they will manipulate the price of metals to secure their federal power.
Carter Murphy
That set is 31.715 oz of silver or 6.343 grams per quarter
Robert Ortiz
I was actually wondering this same thing. I'd like to get a set but damn, that description was useless.
Robert Russell
Would it be weird to give a silver coin as a gift?
>31.715 oz of silver o 1 silver oz. That's what I thought, but without a description like user here said it doesn't make anyone want to jump into the sale right away.
Thanks. These premiums are a bit absurd, but given that earlier this month Zig Forums practically cornered the 5oz U.S Mint coins in like 2 orders I see how fast their silver supply went down.
Chase Cooper
And I'll still buy gold and silver, cheaper thanks to them. At least when (not if, when) we'll be forced back to some kind of Metal Standard, either me or my children will have the safety cushion to land on.
Dominic Garcia
Consider numismatic coins for that.
Tyler Sullivan
The other set without the batcoin is $36
Elijah Thompson
>And I'll still buy gold and silver, cheaper thanks to them. This is how I feel. I want the layman to keep calm and drudge on. I want as much time to keep buying as I need. I hope it takes 10 more years for this thing to fall apart. Every week I buy another few ounces of silver, slowly securing my childs future.
Mason Nelson
Silver is looking really bullish. 30$ is in sight!
Mason Gutierrez
I know. I dont have the money for either at this point. I've got bills to pay & a house to buy in cash. Another month & i'll be buying like 50 more oz.
Jordan Morales
When I'm talking about PM price manipulation, I'm talking about PM prices being allowed to rise only gradually and slowly over time, with sudden spikes in prices being hammered down to reduce panic (the manipulation).
I don't foresee any large dips in prices any time soon so I would just buy now or now-ish.
Silver will be at $127 an ounce by then. Or around the same as now.
Noah Moore
Holy Fuck I've stopped reading that Manga like 6 years ago. Did the MC ever got with Sensei or he went for the sisters? Did it end?
Thomas Baker
idk I am still reading it, I just read on Zig Forums however that the author goes full piss fetish mode and the MC dumps the teacher and the girls piss on him every chapter.
But I am still at the part we he is dating the sensei who is definitely best girl
Dollar index is collapsing again. Won't be surprised to see $30/$2000 very soon
Bentley Price
In the past small denomination and non-precious metal coins were commonly counterfeit. Even precious metals were counterfeit and there are great examples of counterfeit PM coins being of a higher purity than the originals - though generally looking a bit worse and that's how they actually could circulate. For the most part this was actually ignored by authorities generally despite literal death penalties in place. Small coinage wasn't very economical for the authorities and the forgeries tended to be good enough that they were commonly accepted. Coinage for small transaction was always needed... and considering people actually saved... in those coins there really needed to be a fresh supply continuously. And on top of that the PM coins that were forged tended to occur when supply was short and again... authorities looked the other way (as they needed to get paid too!)... as long as the metal content was right (or about right). It was actually the governments that debased the coins... at that time... not counterfeiters - counterfeits didn't want to end up dead. The threat was always the governments.
Currently, and for a very long time, numerous mints and refiners that strike coins or bars are profitable without a face value. It's also generally accepted that tiny face values given would not be chased up by authorities and in some regions is actually protected under law. No one is going to jump on a kid making tiny copper coins with a smiley face on it marked as 1c... though many people might not accept those coins outside of novelty. Also, no one is going to jump on a mint making a 1/10th oz gold coin marked as 1c even without permission. The only case when it's actually an issue is with real fakes... as in selling or circulating something that's not as it should be... metal content being otherwise.
We have entered a time when it's possible to make a fake silver coin with real silver and be profitable for the forger (I am talking about $1 coins). The technology is not too expensive and for the most part it's enterally possible for it to be home-grown. There is no reason to fake the material of those coins other than greed and over time risk going to pound me in the ass prison will catch up with those people. If there was a minimum (rather than a maximum) of 15 years jail plus other penalties people selling fake material might think twice... might. When gold and silver becomes more common XRF will be normal and even banks will start to carry them and offer it as part of their service - and they are going to need it to recapitalise anyway.
I think in the years to come we are going to see home-brew coins come to market as all those silver bars are turned into low denomination money... and we are going to see some truly beautiful 1c coins hit the market. And, they aren't necessarily going to be from well known mints... just user coins. No one really knows who made them or their origin and there might also be many makes of the same design as they are copied by other anons. And we might even end up with anons faces on these coins - a total new type of shit coin. This will just be another step of turning the real world into a tibetan basket weaving forum and us ruling over it.
>XRF will be normal and even banks will start to carry them and offer it as part of their service XRF doesn't tell you anything about the content or purity of a coin.
Michael Ramirez
>Or around the same as now. That would be great... Looking for a kilo bar honestly & even if we jump to $35 an oz its still possible for me.
Ryder Cox
>500-600 dollars That's like 18 - 20oz user. You can't buy any more?
I'm buying 3 fondle pieces and a 10oz Den of Thieves bar tomorrow. $36/oz but I like the designs, it's going to shift my per Oz price a crazy amount. $466 for 13oz. These numbers just sound crazy to me, first time paying over $30/oz