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stunlee

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Everything posted by stunlee

  1. By my count, Don has 169. He looks extremely likely to win: Georgia 16 Florida 29 North Carolina 15 Utah 6 Alaska 3 Idaho 4 For a total of 242 He has a very good chance in: Wisconsin 10 He has three point leads in Arizona 11 Michigan 16 Which takes him into the White House.
  2. Both Guardian and RealClear have Donald slightly leading in Ohio, North Carolina and Florida.
  3. If Florida goes Democrat, I estimate Clinton leads 130-96 at the moment.
  4. Don has a 3% percent lead in Florida with 15% counted. Don with a large lead in Virginia, Obama win in 2012. South Carolina just declared for Don. ༼ つ ◕_◕ ༽つ DONALD TAKE MY HIGH ENERGY ༼ つ ◕_◕ ༽つ
  5. Early results in, looking good for Don so far: http://www.realclearpolitics.com/ Clinton Trump Kentucky (8) 30.9 64.5 (20%) Indiana (11) 32.4 63.2 (12%)
  6. Following Deutsche Bank's admission that it manipulated silver prices earlier today, http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2016-04-14/case-closed-deutsche-bank-confirms-silver-market-manipulation-legal-settlement-agree it has also admitted that it manipulated gold prices. http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2016-04-14/first-silver-now-gold-deutsche-bank-admits-it-also-rigged-gold-prices-legal-settleme The mining companies now need to launch a class action to punish the criminal bankers. Maybe a group of traders who lost money could also launch a class action.
  7. http://www.tfmetalsreport.com/blog/7563/deutschebank-settles-silver-lawsuit I personally think that what has gone on in the metals markets is multiple times worse than the LIBOR scandal. It is now up to the silver miners to sue the banks.
  8. Massive Rallies "Dead-Ahead" For Gold, Silver - and Oil !? (suggests Paul Thomason, Editor, Elliott Wave Analytics) There are none so blind as those who will not see. Nearly two years ago now.
  9. Tens or hundreds of thousands of mine workers in some of the poorest countries in the world losing their jobs as the mining companies go bankrupt and being forced into abject poverty.
  10. Yet again, people seem unable to see the lorryloads of evidence that gold is an utterly fixed market I just cannot understand why. Interestingly, Hatton Garden Metals, one of the major retail dealers is now completely sold out of everything gold related. http://www.hattongardenmetals.com/buy/cid5/gold-coins
  11. Anyone else have gold falling 60 dollars in a minute to 1070 dollars at about 2.30am British time? Good to know that the free and fair gold market that we have all grown to know and love is still being tightly regulated.
  12. Serious answer: so unbelievably manipulated is the silver market that the price has all but no connection to the actual supply and demand and market fundamentals any more. No-one can give a logical answer as to what is going on. Frivolous answer: it was just 16 days before the anniversary of the death of Kim Jong Il and silver is now priced at 16 dollars and something. Silver will rally 10 dollars in 2 months.
  13. I wasn't certain whether that last post wasn't a very subtle piece of satire. There is only one factor that affects the price of silver and I don't know why people are still bothering with pointless and irrelevant things such as supply and demand and technical analysis.
  14. Thanks for the reply. Count me in on the number 3 option, we are at the start of decades of unparallelled financial repression by a rapacious banking and government cartel who are happy to destroy the middle classes. You were the first person I saw mention the concept, what would convince you that we are on option number 3?
  15. I have mentioned this in other places, but why are the mining companies apparently happy to sit back and see their companies destroyed? Just about every silver miner in the world must be losing shedloads of money now.
  16. Just bumping this excellent post again. I would argue that the bull market has now been completely destroyed. If you still post here Walktothewater, what do you think?
  17. I don't even find this stuff funny any more, just really really tragic. Did you not see the rocket explode yesterday? NASA can barely get to the ISS nowadays. Or is that all part of a massive plan to hide these mars missions?
  18. Just bumping this excellent post again.
  19. Commemorative coins don't hold their value and, what's worse, many banks and shops won't accept them, as this couple discovered http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/personalfinance/11001196/Bank-sold-us-5-coins-that-arent-worth-a-penny.html Now of course they are not silver but the same principle applies.
  20. Yes, I agree with that. But it was always my fear that they would decide that it was "beikoku no sei" That may well be the case but the person buying the Britannia would still have a nearly twice as heavy a coin that had cost 25 percent less, or 40 percent less if they had bought where VAT was not payable.
  21. One of the posters on 24k (azazel?) was saying that he took the coins into the pub and tried to get the other customers to get the bar staff to accept them. They are certainly worth having as a discussion piece, a souvenir and for possible numismatic value (not that I know anything about that) but the "proper" coins are the better bet in the long term. Edit: Of course the 20 pound coins would become a lot more interesting if the silver price approached or exceeded 30 pounds an ounce. Wowsers, that must be one of the greatest trades of all time! I even had a look back earlier in the thread and you nailed it to the day. This thread makes great reading, the parabolic move starts at about page 245 of this thread and should be read by everyone.
  22. Thanks for the reply. Yes, I can see all of that. Let us continue with the 10* 20 pound coins versus 12 Britannias scenario I earlier painted out with a number of different price scenarios. Price Silver price triples. 12 Britannias worth around 480 pounds. 10*20 coins worth 200 pounds nominal, or around 225 pounds as silver. Silver price doubles. 12 Britannias worth around 320 pounds. 10*20 coins worth 200 pounds nominal, or around 150 pounds as silver. Silver price unchanged. 12 Britannias worth around 160 pounds. 10*20 coins worth 200 pounds nominal, or around 75 pounds as silver. Silver price halves. 12 Britannias worth around 90 pounds. 10*20 coins worth 200 pounds nominal, or around 38 pounds as silver. The 20 pound coins will prove somewhat better if the price of silver falls or stays the same. But we already know that the price of silver is below the price of production, it surely cannot go much lower than it is now? I don't see what risk one would be hedging against here. Surely the only thing one would actually be hedging is the risk of running out of paper money completely and being forced to sell ones silver? And, as has already been demonstrated on this thread, you can spend the coins only with a great deal of difficulty and possibly with the police being called. Colour me unconvinced about the advantage of that. I have included VAT fees in my rough calculations but there is no VAT on silver coins in Germany for example.
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