Nerovnáha medzi papierovým a reálnym striebrom

Investičné banky k pokrytiu dopytu predávajú tzv. papierové striebro staviac na to, že stále to zostane len pri papieroch a nikto nebude požadovať výmenu týchto papierov za fyzické striebro. Už roky je práve známa nerovnováha medzi papiermi a skutočnými zásobami tohto kovu. V súčasnej fáze cena striebra technicky nerastie, len vzhľadom na skutočnú ponuku na trhu sa stáva reálnou.

gold

With the rise in silver prices came new speculative interest from bankers, average investors, and even the next-door neighbor. The problem is very simple: the supply of silver for the investing class is imaginary—a product of the banking system and fractional reserve silver.

In order to supply investment demand, investment banks (JP Morgan and others) have been selling off paper silver in droves, hedging their bets on the futures market, and hoping that no one ever bothers to take delivery. It has become evident, especially in this most recent move toward $30, that the price of silver and the supply of silver are no longer related.

What we have now is a market where the real, physical silver is flying out of the COMEX (since few seeking to buy real silver are interested in certificates or exchange-traded funds), and the tangible stocks are replaced with paper silver.

Silver prices are not technically rising, but they’re becoming realistic. The current pricing structure is dependent on a supply of silver that does not exist. When this realization comes to life, silver prices will rise, but in truth, prices have already exploded.

Those trading the COMEX are paying $25-30 for the CHANCE at taking delivery of an ounce. If we put the current, real supply of silver at 10% the open interest, then prices are already $250 per ounce.

Článok: www.commodityonline.com/news/The-great-disconnect-of-Silver-supply-demand-and-prices-36014-3-1.html


31.01.2011

"Let me issue and control a nation's money supply, and I care not who makes its laws.”  Mayer Amschel Rothschild

"History records that the money changers have used every form of abuse, intrigue, deceit, and violent means possible to maintain their control over governments by controlling money and its issuance."  James Madison