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RE: Silver To SKYROCKET In 2018? - Silver Is Incredibly Undervalued! (with David Morgan)

in #money7 years ago (edited)

If anybody analysed the trading of silver or gold in last decade or more....what you could see, was mass sell of gold/silver when its price started to rise just a little bit, so the price started to plunge again. No one could be so stupid, to buy and sell at the wrong time - for decades. That was only a job of wall street, to keep prices low.

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Central banks especially China & Russia been buying gold like there's no tomorrow. Given time and they may well succeed with their objective of weakening the power of the US Federal Reserve Bank

I think we all want to see this to happen

Whenever somebody mentions the silver market I immediate think of the late Nelson Bunker Hunt - who at the end of trying to corner the market and failing spectacularly said 'a billion dollars isn't worth what it used to be' That was in the 80's!!

Wikipedia - Beginning in the early 1970s, Hunt and his brothers William Herbert and Lamar began accumulating large amounts of silver. By 1979, they had nearly cornered the global market.[8] In the last nine months of 1979, the brothers profited by an estimated $2 billion to $4 billion in silver speculation, with estimated silver holdings of 100 million troy ounces (3,100,000 kg).[9]
Primarily because of the Hunt brothers' accumulation of the precious metal, prices of silver futures contracts and silver bullion rose from $11 an ounce in September 1979 to $50 an ounce in January 1980. Silver prices ultimately collapsed to below $11 an ounce two months later.[10] The largest single day drop in the price of silver occurred on "Silver Thursday."[2] In February 1985 the Hunt brothers were charged "with manipulating and attempting to manipulate the prices of silver futures contracts and silver bullion during 1979 and 1980" by the United States Commodity Futures Trading Commission.[2]
In September 1988 the Hunt brothers filed for bankruptcy under Chapter 11 of the Federal Bankruptcy Code largely due to lawsuits incurred as a result of their silver speculation.[2]
In 1989, in a settlement with the CFTC, Nelson Bunker Hunt was fined US$10 million and banned from trading in the commodity markets as a result of civil charges of conspiring to manipulate the silver market.[2] This fine was in addition to a multimillion-dollar settlement to pay back taxes, fines and interest to the Internal Revenue Service for the same period. His brother made a similar settlement.[2]