|
"Regarding the collapse of the silver market, Mr. Lunt is among the
optimists---"We couldn't have hoped for anything better. We now have the
raw material at a price level somewhere near the cost of what it really takes
to get it out of the ground. But the possibility that the market may again
skyrocket worries me more than anything."
The above appeared in the Wall Street Journal, March 31, 1980, page 16. Mr.
Denham Lunt Jr. of Lunt Silversmiths was, guess what, a member of the Silver
Users Association. What would that jackass know about silver mining costs,
other than biting the hands that fed him? As Marlon Brando told Captain Bligh
in "Mutiny On The Bounty" (1962)---
"You remarkable pig! You can thank whatever pig god you pray to!"
Remember Trevor Howard as Captain Bligh made a comment about someone's
"backbone laid bare," a reference to flogging, ahh silver users, be
flogged! The users worry about price uptrends, huh? Let them experience what
John Wayne warned a gang of thieves about how they'd die (1942, "In Old
California") after drinking contaminated water---
"Burning with fever, all twisted up in agony and fighting for
breath!"
Okay users, get braced for silver to skyrocket again and fellow investors, be
ready to have the finger of blame pointed your way. Silver will attract so
much money as to be a landmark in financial history! China has supposedly
tied up 75% of world silver production for 2005. The Wall Street Journal,
October 26, 1979, page 48 mentioned a "mysterious silver-buying
clique." Silver has been in my thoughts since as an 11-year-old boy at a
washateria (laundromat if you prefer) I first saw the new clad coins go into
circulation, and I somehow realized the older coins I was used to have true
value. The newer coins were pretenders, fakes with orange guts. Time
magazine, June 11, 1965, page 84, made it sound like we were getting
something better (because of advertising patronage from silver users)---
"The U.S. will have the world's only two-colored coins."
Two generations removed from that time, many signs indicate we are weeks or
days away from the moment the general public becomes aware of the silver
shortage. We've heard this before, enough to make us worn-out skeptics, but
the end really is in sight now, else silver would still be below $5 where the
users and paper money creators wanted it. Understand first that silver is the
victim of a monetary conspiracy; and secondly, of an industrial users
conspiracy! Wolkoff left CRIMEX in December, and around early February the
Silver Users Association website retreated into a "spider hole"
(reference to Saddam Hussein type hiding place) with membership list and
objectives deleted as its companies move work to India and China. Never mind
that the media will find ways to excuse silver shorts and users, and to blame
"hoarders" (silver savers); "speculators" (investors);
"profiteering mining companies" (while hushing up the fact of many
losing or near-profitless years and bankruptcies); and "terrorist Islamic
governments" (because paper money creators fear precious metals)
returning to silver use for exchange. What Americans will come to understand
is the terror of unbacked currency! A look back at earlier silver episodes
will give us a basis for projecting what the nearing situation will look
like, with more intensity this time. Francis Wemple, treasurer of Handy &
Harman (Silver Users Association), blamed "hoarders" for the silver
squeeze of 1964 (New York Times, August 18, 1964, page 39). Over and over again,
like infinity, we detect the suggestion that only silver users have rights to
silver. No one outside their bloodsucking circle has rights to own silver, or
to profit in silver! The New York Times, June 21, 1971, page 42, reported a
silver summit in Mexico City attended by delegates from Mexico, Peru,
Australia, Canada and the U.S. Part of the communiqu� stated---
"Delegates all agreed that the price of silver must inevitably rise from
its present low level."
We have lived with a real silver shortage, or deficit, in actuality for at
least 55 years. COMEX silver delivery delays, including deferred deliveries,
are items we've often heard about. The Wall Street Journal, December 21,
1979, page 26, had this typical bit of corruption to report as normal business---
"In recent weeks, when it appeared that large numbers of contracts of
these commodities were held by small numbers of traders, three different
futures exchanges placed trading restrictions on coffee, copper and silver
for December delivery. The idea was to protect holders of short positions, or
commitments to deliver the commodities, from having to pay abnormally high
prices to obtain supplies, because stocks were scant in approved
warehouses."
Yes, the exchanges are operated in connivance with short sellers, especially
as regards silver. Large corporate users of commodities appear to have abused
producers of commodities other than silver. In that instance, delivery
deadlines for coffee were extended from December 31, 1979 to January 25,
1980. Just change the rules as they go along so insiders and users never
lose! Do you suppose consumer product conglomerates that sell coffee in
supermarkets have more market influence than ol cousin Lemuel working his
still back of Outhouse Gap, who bought coffee calls? WSJ, January 11, 1980,
page 32 mentioned the increasing rule changes designed to help short sellers
in silver and commented---
"The exchange took additional steps to regain control of the silver
market by limiting to 50, effective immediately, the contracts traders may
acquire for delivery this month or next. Normally the January and February
contracts are fairly inactive. "We didn't want a big rush of people
coming into those months asking for delivery," said Lowell Mintz, Comex
chairman. Mr. Mintz said that all traders "are going to have to comply
with our rules. If somebody breaks the rules, we'll take care of it."
The Comex also raised silver margin requirements."
COMEX and CFTC will regulate longs but not shorts. Rules there are designed
to help big corporations who use commodities! Lowell Mintz runs with Sanford
Weill of Citigroup; Richard Debs of Federal Reserve Bank of New York; James
Wolfensohn of World Bank; Mrs. Vincent Astor; British tycoon Sir Deryck
Maughan, vice chairman of Citigroup; reporter Peter Jennings (can't wait for
him to "explain" the silver shortage); and ambassador Felix Rohatyn
of Rothschild allied Lazard Freres at Carnegie Hall in New York, where they
are all officials and donors. Mintz must have wanted the silver price to
collapse to help the silver users and the paper money creators! Now in spring
2004, will the Central Fund of Canada actually take delivery of all the
silver promised, or will a diplomatic incident take place between the U.S.
and Canada? We hear that at least 1,000 big ingots are overdue, and that an
"arrangement" is in place to allow for up to 6 month deferred
delivery! This, with the British Empire affiliated Canadian IMPERIAL Bank of
Commerce! Defaults have ALREADY taken place! Anything to accommodate short
sellers, rule changes, emergency orders, CFTC intervention if
necessary---maybe even a Presidential Executive Order or Supreme Court
ruling! The WSJ, October 26, 1979, page 48 commented---
"The Silver Users Association, a trade group that includes film
manufacturers, electronics firms and other users, has been calling on the
exchanges and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission to limit the amount of
silver speculators can hold. "I am dismayed at the way certain
individuals are acting in this market," says Walter Frankland, the
group's executive vice president."
This is just what happened in the 1979-1980 event! To call SUA a "trade
group" is to insult legitimate trade groups. But far from being a
manipulation of 15 to 20 years, the COMEX problem traces at least to 1970!
The Wall Street Journal, April 29, 1970, page 32 story title says it
all---"Silver Futures Prices Plunge at New York Despite Tight
Supplies." See also NYT June 10, 1971, page 67 about Mexican officials
whose "mines have suffered severely from the falling price of
silver" blaming the "speculative futures market" for unnatural
low silver prices! Treasury silver "auctions" ended in fall 1970,
whereupon COMEX was ready to become the focal point of price-depressive
tactics with a repeat of the April 1970 backstabbing incident. Then there was
another earlier British Empire silver manipulation in 1969 that depressed
prices (Wall Street Journal, December 5, 1969, p.32)--
"General selling of silver contracts was created by news that the British
Treasury had worked out an arrangement with British banks and bullion dealers
to reduce stocks of silver in a move to recapture some British currency. It
was estimated that about $200 million of sterling was used in 1968 to finance
silver purchases in the U.S. and other sources. A record of 9,340 contracts
of silver was traded on the Commodity Exchange."
As of 2004 there's no silver on hand to be dumped, it seems. Deferred
deliveries would be unnecessary otherwise. Naked shorting and rule changes
only hold prices down temporarily. What will the silver scene look like when
the average person knows about the silver shortage affecting industry and
sharply spiraling prices? They will all pile in to buy, of course! That is
why you should act in all haste, at the first opportunity, to acquire
whatever silver you still intend to obtain. Regular visitors to this website
have been building their silver holdings at least since the $4.01 low in fall
2001. Have you ever seen weather broadcasts featuring coverage of coastal
areas affected by hurricanes? If so, you must have seen footage of grocery
stores emptied of provisions, and people buying up all the plywood they can
locate, to board up their windows in an attempt to avoid severe storm damage.
These weather events provoke strong buying panics. Gas stations have their
inventory pumped dry as people seek to flee the area. National Guard and
police watch for looters. Since we are moving towards a lasting scarcity of
silver, don't count on being able to buy any silver after the news breaks.
Besides, why would you wait to pay much higher prices? Silver prices rose by
75% in just one month (Wall Street Journal, September 21, 1979, page 43,
adding that "they haven't any idea where the spurt in silver prices will
stop.") A story they ran on September 13, 1979, page 38 said---
"Analysts had been watching silver's steep rise, which began at just
over $9 an ounce on August 20, with increasing incredulousness as the gains
continued day after day as the metal surged to a peak of $12.74 an
ounce."
WSJ, October 26, 1979, page 48, noted silver prices were triple over a year
earlier. By mid January 1980, silver jumped some 450% over the August 1979
price. History will repeat, however much more forcefully than before.
Worldwide panic buying and absence of supply will drive silver's surge.
Consider an item from WSJ, December 3, 1979, page 15---
"In the past two weeks, rumors have circulated in Europe that Arab
interests intend to take delivery of as much as $2 billion of silver from the
U.S. because they fear their U.S. assets may be frozen if there is a further
deterioration of relations between the U.S. and the Muslim world. "Some
people are talking about a silver price of $30 an ounce" as a
possibility, said Bruce Leeming, a director of Rudolf Wolff & Co., a
London Metal Exchange member. Silver's appeal on the LME has been heightened
by U.S. exchanges restrictions on trading, another London trader commented.
The lack of faith in money has helped too, he added."
WSJ had this to say on February 4, 1980, page 34---
"Unidentified foreigners play a big role in the silver market. Rumor has
it that some wealthy Saudi Arabians are pressing the State Department to use
its influence to have free trading restored in the Comex silver market. The
rumor is denied by the State Department, the CFTC and the Comex, but at least
two well-connected metal traders are convinced it is true. The stakes are
high in this battle among silver traders, and anything is possible. On any
day that silver's price rises $1, and there have been many of them recently,
holders of short positions or commitments to deliver silver, have to put up a
total of $100 million or more in additional margin money. Yet, these people
may make decisions on market rules that favor their positions, others say. A
prominent metal trader declares flatly---"Position takers shouldn't be
decision makers." Says Philip M. Bloom, a Chicago lawyer, "If the
people who made the decision (liquidation only trading) have stood to benefit
the most, there is something wrong with the decision and the process from
which it was made." Mr. Bloom says he has been retained by a foreign
holder of a long position on the Comex to press for a complete reopening of
the exchange's silver market. On Jan. 21, the Comex board ordered a ban on
new positions in silver futures and limited trading to the unwinding of
existing positions. Mr. Bloom says his client wants free trading resumed and
is willing to institute legal action to obtain it. Mr. Bloom says he has
asked the Comex for the minutes and voting record of the Jan. 21 meeting. Lee
Berendt, Comex president, says the exchange doesn't distribute its minutes to
outsiders. Board members "carried themselves respectfully" in
making their decision. "These are trying times," Mr. Berendt adds,
"We are a group of people trying to function in these times and
hopefully to survive them." Some silver specialists wonder whether the
trading curbs and some traders' irate reactions to them will spell the end of
silver futures trading in the U.S. Many regulators are grappling with how to
cope with the changed nature of the silver market. Some specialists suggest
the Chicago Board of Trade's approach, which is aimed at limiting rights to
obtain delivery, is a better approach than the all-embracing ban on new
positions the Comex instituted. The Comex subsequently allowed new positions
of as many as 50 contracts, starting today, but "I don't consider that
amendment to be opening up the market," Mr. Bloom says."
Unlike 1980, COMEX and CFTC will be powerless to reverse the price increases.
Let them get drunk and make a rule freezing the silver deficit! People all
over the world will awaken and want silver! In May 1969 the manipulative Feds
lifted the ban on melting of the discontinued 90% silver coins in a move to
free more metal for the predacious Silver Users Association, whose
predecessor companies, members of the Silver Users Emergency Committee, first
melted 90% coins almost 58 years ago (Commercial & Financial Chronicle,
July 25, 1946, page 492). However, "speculators" and the
ever-infamous "hoarders" took the move to mean that silver was
getting scarcer (correct interpretation) and the Wall Street Journal, May 27,
1969, p. 8 reported that the effect also took hold overseas---
"Traders note that continuing monetary jitters in Europe may push the
price of silver higher again. There is a tremendous interest in silver coins
in European centers, particularly in Zurich, Paris and Frankfurt, one dealer
in London observes."
In the article, "Gold, Silver Prices Unfathomable Surge Stirring Rumors
of Big Money Invasion" (WSJ), September 6, 1979, page 30, we find---
"The recently fervent interest in precious metals on the part of wealthy
individuals isn't surprising, says Norton Waltuch, director of ContiCommodity
Investor Services, whose large purchases of silver have been instrumental in
spurring prices skyward, traders say. "Just look at the vast pools of
money floating around the world," says Mr. Waltuch. "Paper
currencies are declining. People who have it, have to put their money
somewhere."
WSJ, June 18, 1979, page 30, quoted Simon Strauss of American Smelting &
Refining (ASARCO) explaining to the dummies in the readership why the
interest in silver versus paper money, among lots of investors---
"Through the centuries, regardless of political or geographic factors,
man has retained a passion for things---in this case silver---of intrinsic
value."
Strauss was born in 1911 in Lima, Peru, of a copper mining family. At age 36,
in 1947, he became a governor of the Commodity Exchange, and held that
position into 1963. I haven't seen anything yet to suggest he helped lay a
foundation for a silver suppression. Also, he was a director of the Silver
Institute from 1971 through 1976, and served as its president, 1971 through
1973. Archives, if available, could reveal if their position on silver prices
was as timid then as it appears to have been in recent times.
IT'S NOW OR NEVER!
That was one of the hit songs by Elvis Presley. Take it to heart with silver.
WSJ, November 20, 1967, page 28 said---
"Melting of dimes, quarters and half dollars may be the Treasury
Department's last stab to prevent runaway silver prices, but industry sources
predict it won't be the final solution. Dealers still see the possibility of
a price-inflationary silver shortage."
The final solution appears to have been silver leasing from foreign central
banks, and suspicion is running high that as of now, there's no more silver
to lease (dump). WSJ had several accounts of what took place as clad coins
started circulating, like the one it ran on January 19, 1968, page 14,
"Hoarders Accelerate Rush for Silver coins." Federal Reserve branch
banks accumulated 210 million ounces of 90% silver coins, working against the
public for the greedy Silver Users Association. The article said---
"The Treasury wants to melt coins exclusively so the Government can
continue to help supply industrial silver needs, which far exceed domestic
production."
It would have been unreasonable to ask the Mephistophelean Silver Users
Association to fend for itself, right? The Treasury Department ordered
"more than a dozen separating machines to weed-out the 90% silver coins
from the clad, which will be recirculated." Ironic how they said it was
the silver coins that were "weeded out!" I guess the silver users
manufactured those machines for them, considering how thoughtful they always
are, like when they manufactured the cupronickel material for the new debased
coins! The rush to grab silver coins was on! 36 years later, few silver coins
are available (most have been melted down for industrial use), especially in
proportion to the number of people who will want to own some, and in ratio to
the amount of dollars chasing them. Full-page newspaper ads begging to buy silver
will be routine. Manufacturers will try to buy silver direct from the public,
but will have little success competing with dealers, since industrial users
are too accustomed to stealing metal rather than making fair offers for it.
They will have to buy from dealers. They will scream to the government that
we need "silver purchasing licenses," issued to manufacturers only!
THE COMING SILVER SCENE
Dealers and coin shops will be overwhelmed with demand for real silver coins,
even as coins are coming in from sellers, inventories will turn as fast as
they come in and demand will not be satisfied. Buyers will attempt to buy
from purchasers who come away from the counter with some silver. As of now,
one large Internet dealer has only since mid-March 2004 advertised it has
"some" half-dollar bags I see now they have only the 40 percenters
left. I suggest that as silver climbs, bags will no longer be sold by face
value times a multiplication factor. Bags will be placed on scales and sold
by weight. Thirty mint state quarters sometimes stack as high as 40 slick
ones. The value is clearly disparate. Clean 1964's are better than worn
1928's; condition is important for metals investors. Coins will also be sold
more by the roll or by the tube, rather than by the bag or half-bag, due to
higher prices and higher demand. This will also make 90% coin verification
easier. Remaining coins that are worn slick will tend to go to industry for
melting, as collectors usually don't want them, or turned into sterling
jewelry for the display case by adding some .999 metal. Unfortunately, there
are some lightweight bullion bars around, starting with 10 ouncers, whose
bottom edges have had silver filed off, to chisel some grams here and there.
Then there are some legit bars that look like that, but the weight was
adjusted to correct by the refiner. Don't be surprised if dealers want to
check the under side and edges of your bars, and weigh them on a scale. Also
be certain to segregate any avoirdupois weight items from standard troy, because
you'll get less for these, and hopefully you didn't buy them as troy.
Before you sell coin bags, please verify that there are no "orange
gut" coins present, or if halves, 40% coins. Most investors check their
bags as they buy, or when they take delivery. Some of us unknowingly have
some clad mixed into our silver. I got some that way, checked the contents (a
slow process), notified the dealer, who took me at my word and shipped the
appropriate coins to round out the transaction. I believe the only dealers
who would purposefully place clad and 40% in with 90% are those lacking a
fixed address. Reputable dealers have their company name on the canvas bags.
If you find and remove some clad coins, you will be saving both them and
yourself embarrassment. If you have elderly relatives or friends who want to
buy or sell silver, you should accompany them to see that transactions are
handled properly, and to carry the load. (Example---a roving dealer has a
100-ounce branded bar that has been drilled and filled with lead, and
evidence is visible on one end of the bar, and on the scale reading. The
dealer switches the good bar brought in by the elderly person by maneuvering
the good bar briefly out of view, and returns the corrupted bar, saying how
sorry he is to say, but the bar has been drilled and filled with lead, so he
can only offer 20% of full price! To clarify, I didn't say, "all roving
dealers are shady.") The same problem could occur with switches of clad
coins and 90%. Write down the serial numbers on bars that have them, before
you go in. Another problem might be someone suggests assay charges are
applicable just because you don't have Englehard or Johnson-Matthey. There
are a fair number of other good bars, including Manfra, Tordella &
Brookes (MTB) that you don't see as many of and Wall Street Mint. I know
someone who has Royal Canadian Mint 100 ouncers, not often seen, but more
attractive than Englehard and just as authentic.
PHYSICAL SILVER TO BE SCARCER THAN MINING SHARES!
If the only way you can get some physical silver, or add to what you have, is
to sell some mining shares, you should do so. Remember mining shares will
continue to be available at some price; however, don't count on being able to
buy more metal. With a careful approach, first verified by paper trading, you
can trade your way to more shares. Not so with real silver. There will
probably be advisory services offering guidance on silver stock trading. You
can track their performance, or subscribe to several, and compare their
results. You can view the shares as investment, but the physical metal is an
insurance policy. People who cut diamonds, and traded in them, used to regard
the gems as "disaster insurance" or a "God forbid
account," sometimes concealing them in the hollowed out leg of a wooden
chair. I question whether you will be able to buy much real silver in an
environment of full public awareness, for several reasons. First, many
dealers will resort to use of waiting lists, to give the impression of trying
to treat the public fairly. First come, first served is a maxim that few can
argue with. Yes, higher prices will cause dishoarding but remember, most of
that overhang was eliminated by 1980, melted and consumed by industry and
also, buyers will greatly outnumber sellers.
FAILING TO GET SILVER IN THE STAMPEDE!
You could make phone calls and get busy signals for hours, and when you
finally connect, after being on hold for 20 minutes, be told there are 17,262
individuals ahead of you on the list. To be on the list, good-faith deposits
may be asked for. That way, the insincere "tire-kickers" will be
shaken out, leaving only serious buyers of real silver in a market that may
well be rising 7 sessions out of 10. Dealers will use recorded messages to
save themselves phone time. Buyers will accost people bringing in silver to
sell to dealers on the parking lot, offering to pay a little more than the
dealer rate; police will be summoned by commercial real estate owners to
prevent loss to their tenants from such activity. Police will be in the area
to prevent hold-ups on and off the premises. Dealers may have to partition
their offices to keep sellers and buyers insulated from each other. State tax
collectors will be on hand to monitor tax applicable transactions. Mass
mailings could go out offering silver for cheaper rates, then when funds are
remitted, buyers find the "sellers" are gone with their funds. If a
National Emergency is declared, the Federal government will elbow its way to
the front of the silver acquisition line, and your hopes to own some silver,
or additional silver, are out the window. Watch for the Defense Department
under Mr. $1.61 silver, Donald Rumsfeld, one of the most extremely dangerous
operators ever in government, to suddenly announce we need a new silver
stockpile, and that private citizens have no rights to own silver and must
turn it in (for $1.61 an ounce?) Maybe the Defense Policy Board will make
such a recommendation.
$1.61 SILVER RUMSFELD RUNS WITH THE DEVIL
Rumsfeld is, guess what, an acquaintance of General Lord Guthrie of
Craigiebank (Order of the British Empire), a director of N.M. Rothschild
& Sons, of the banking family whose influence demonetized silver in
America in 1873 and wrecked the middle class, causing untold numbers of
foreclosures! Another of Rummy's pals is the Right Honorable Lord Brittan of
Spennithorne of UBS Warburg, connected to the 1913 Federal Reserve Act; Peter
Sutherland, chairman of British Petroleum and Goldman Sachs International,
founder of the World Trade Organization; and Carla Hills of silver short
American International Group. Rummy also associates with George Fisher, CEO
of Kodak. Maybe Rumsfeld could sell his New Mexico retreat and buy a place in
Nevada or Idaho so he can be closer to the silver miners he's abused. You
might be able to get a 1964-dime sideways through the gap in Condoleeza
Rice's front teeth, but that doesn't guarantee you'll be able to buy it. (Or
would want it after that!) Of course, you will also be competing with
industrial silver users, making it enormously difficult to buy more silver.
There is nothing to stop industrial users from walking into coin dealer
offices and buying over the counter, especially as they can't get silver in
their accustomed manner from leasing, polymetallic byproduct silver, and futures
contracts. In my first essay here, "Silver's Mushroom Cloud," I
predicted---
"By the end of the second week of the crisis, many industrial users
cannot get delivery of metal, and the unbridled buying panic erupts---the sun
catches on fire!"
WSJ had this to say about industrial need for silver (July 18, 1967, page
2)---
"So important is the metal to Kodak production lines that it will meet
any price it has to on the open market."
Louis K. Eilers, president of Eastman Kodak, said that a one-cent price
increase in silver cost them $280,000, a figure from two generations past
(WSJ, September 23, 1968, page 28). So the best reason for acting at once is
the present relatively low price, plus the lack of competition from these
other groups. Once the emergency comes into public view, gold and silver
prices will be rising so fast jewelers will have trouble marking up their
metal items fast enough, as before (Wall Street Journal, January 9, 1980,
page 37), except things will accelerate faster this time, go higher, and be
sustained even considering chart declines between increases. The same article
related the true account of Gimbel's department store in Philadelphia, where
two college students bought all the sterling silverware for $50,000, then
they sold it to a dealer for a profit, then the dealer re-sold it to
Gimbel's, again, for a profit---because silver prices were racing high so
fast! WSJ, February 1, 1980, page 30, reported that Kodak experienced a run
on film products that produced shortages in some areas, and had to slap on a
75% price increase in one day. At Willoughby's, a camera store in New York,
film products were depleted in one day (buy some soon); a store in Cambridge,
Massachusetts reported a "panic situation." Dentists, doctors, medical
supply houses and hospitals placed huge orders for X-ray film, buying a
12-month supply if available. Electronics manufacturers placed a
"precious metals surcharge" on everything containing gold, silver
and platinum. A spokesman for Kodak said---
"I don't know what to compare it with. This is all unprecedented."
Industrial silver users, users of X-ray film (no X-ray film, no medical
business), and businesses who buy items containing silver, will fall all over
each other to secure supply, and 75% daily price increases could go on
literally for weeks.
HE WHO HESITATES IS LOST!
We are near the start of a new era in history, that of silver prices piercing
the past record high of January 1980, not only in straight number terms, but
also in inflation-adjusted terms, and being sustained at high levels. Central
banks are out of lease-silver; they aren't silver mines! Remaining hoards are
all price-sensitive. We are near the start of a new era in silver, that of
the metal being very difficult to come by at any price. Mining companies will
become "monetary agencies!" We are nearing the era of worldwide
awareness on the part of the average investor of the ongoing silver deficit.
If your credit is good and you can make monthly payments for six months, you
should consider taking out a loan to buy silver. You should be able to sell a
fraction of the silver within less time than that, to pay off the loan. Using
other people's money to make money, especially in this case, is a smart move.
You are investing in scarcity which provides a secure foundation for profit.
This makes far better sense than the hopeful fools who think they will get
silver by buying metal detectors and go foraging in public places. The
meddling Federal government will be sorely tempted to impose silver rationing.
In such a case, wishing to own silver for investment, or just because it's a
scarce item, will not be considered a legitimate reason for you to get some,
regardless of price.
CONSIDERING THE UNTHINKABLE!
In any rationing scheme a central feature will be Washington dictating to
silver producers who they may sell silver to. Only those holding licenses may
buy silver. In this way their intention would be two-fold---first, to dampen
the price by excluding the general public from bidding; and second, to allow
those who've made campaign contributions to get the political favor of access
to silver. Watch Senators and Congressmen from states like New York, New
Jersey, Pennsylvania and Michigan fight price increases and silver investors!
The next phase would be a move to set a price cap on silver sold to licensed
buyers. That will stir the hornet's nest of trade retaliation by Canada. We
need to be ready to identify Fascism on the part of our dear old Uncle Sam.
Fascism occurs when it tells business to whom it may sell its production, and
for what price. We must have an all-around Precious Metals Lobby to safeguard
interests of mining companies, their shareowners, and investors in physical
metals. Trying to consider all possibilities, would some arm of the Federal
Government blow up a metals dealer location and cause mass fatalities, in
order that all such sites nationwide be ordered shut down? They could say,
public safety is the reason. "Bring your metal to the nearest Federal
Reserve branch bank or Internal Revenue Service office and we'll safely take
it off your hands. Armed Treasury agents will be posted!" My reason for
mentioning such a seemingly remote eventuality is so that it won't happen. We
could say, we predicted you'd do something tyrannical, and we specified what
it was. Evidence exists that Roosevelt knew the Japanese were going to attack
Pearl Harbor, and allowed it to come without warning, so we could be drawn
into the war to help his British associates. Not to boost Kerry, but we
really must get rid of Mr. Bush and his "anti-terrorism" agenda,
designed to relieve us of our personal freedoms! Will they try to criminalize
silver ownership here, while it's lawful for citizens of some Arab states,
the alleged sources of terrorism? Wouldn't that make the Feds look all the
more like financial terrorists?
SECURING YOUR SILVER
This is a matter that is not easily answered. Each investor must develop the
solutions that apply best to their situation. First, be discreet as to buying
and owning silver. Before anyone can target you for theft, they first must be
aware that you have silver. Get a paper shredder and use it, or burn excess
documents. If you own a relatively large amount of metal (whatever that
threshold is), be counseled to resist the urge to brag about it. Yes, some
fish are bigger than others. In this case, the bigger the stash, the more
appealing the target. If it becomes known that you own much silver, be aware
that you may be a kidnap target, or more simply, "we'll hold these guns
on you till you take us to where it is." If your state allows right to
carry a firearm, take advantage of that. Be observant when you come and go at
a metal dealer location, who may be watching you from without and from
within, and be alert as to being followed on the road. Columbian cocaine
gangs are well known for stealing diamonds in transit between dealers, there
is no reason they'd overlook gold, platinum and silver.
Dealers will come and go from their office in bullet resistant vehicles
accompanied by armed security. If you are concerned about being followed by
someone like a private investigator who might be able to run your license
plates, splash some mud on these before leaving home. Return to your
residence by different routes, or to wherever your silver is located.
Speaking of which, do not commit the grave error of holding all your metal in
one location. There is no need to lose all your metal if some can be
sacrificed to save the rest, and hopefully, none will be lost. If you have a
way to disperse the silver among various addresses, including out of state
and rural areas, evaluate the opportunity. I feel better about not having my
metal at home. It is probably not advisable to even think about storing
precious metals at banks, though years ago it was common practice. The Wall
Street Journal, May 5, 1970, page 10 said---
"U.S. coins containing silver have all but disappeared from general
circulation, but vaults at many banks across the country are brimming with
them. These coins generally don't belong to the banks. They are owned by
investors, who have set up some unusual safekeeping and financing
arrangements with their friendly bankers. Silver users and some banking
authorities, however, aren't taking a friendly attitude toward the
arrangements. Big commercial buyers of silver claim the bank arrangements are
artificially buoying the price of the precious metal. Banking authorities say
privately that some of the more complex investor-bank transactions may be in
violation of banking regulations. No one knows for sure just how many silver
coins have found their way into bank tills, but sources say the amount easily
runs into many millions of dollars. One investor syndicate alone claims to
have more than $10 million of coins tucked away in bank vaults. For investors,
the lure of silver coins is obvious. By buying such coins, they can, in
effect, speculate on the silver market and at the same time have the
assurance that their coins will always be worth at least face value. (Melting
of silver coins has been permitted since May of last year.) Another benefit,
investors claim, is that the coins have an intrinsic numismatic value. As the
existing supply dwindles, they reason, the silver-based coins will become
collector items."
WSJ, February 1, 1980, page 30, commented---
"Those who don't want to part with their silver now face a higher
security problem. Customers of the Darien, Connecticut, branch of Union Trust
Company have filled the bank's storage area to capacity with trunks laden
with silverware. Other branches report similar demand. In most states,
standard homeowner insurance policies carry a $1,000 specific liability
limitation for loss of silver due to theft. In many states a homeowner with a
more valuable silver collection must buy a separate policy to get adequate
limitations. New York and New Jersey, however, don't have such liability
limitations. In those states, silver thefts present the potential for very
large losses to the insurance companies, up to the policy limits for personal
property."
If you insure your silver against loss to any extent, you could wake up one
morning to read that the Federal Government just required insurers to report
all such insured silver! They might try to say, you can't sell silver to any
dealer without an "approved" receipt showing that you originally
bought it, and you are therefore assumed to have committed some kind of
"no-no" by having discreetly paid cash for it. Writing checks for
cash at the bank could be a no-no! They could rig the definition of "approved
receipts" so as to make it impossible for any receipts to qualify! Just
because the paper money says "legal tender" on it, doesn't mean
they want you to always use it instead of a check! Big Brother Uncle Federal
Octopus has a need to know your every financial move, like the computer in
(1969) "Colossus---The Forbin Project." If you go in to sell 100
ounce bars, you could find, well, there's a 10 day hold while reports of
stolen property come in, and the Feds have people fabricating false reports,
so they can say, your silver was stolen and you must forfeit it or else.
(Watch for "Precious Metals Emergency" next month). They could copy
down the bullion serial numbers, then come back at you later with a list
saying, those numbers are stolen. No reputable dealer would willingly
cooperate with such official wrongdoing. Therefore, dealers need to
immediately rush to their attorneys if approached to become part of a Federal
plan backed by private financiers to steal silver from investors. If the Feds
want gold and silver for the Treasury or the Federal Reserve, let them bid
for it in a free market.
TO SERVE AND PROTECT, OR TO SEIZE AND STEAL?
Would your local police department cooperate with Federal thievery?
Absolutely! Read "Law Enforcement's Drug of Choice" by Robyn Blumner,
St. Petersburg, Florida Times, August 17, 2003, page 7-D, about civil asset
forfeiture. See Archives at sptimes.com for the editorial. Under Federal
Forfeiture, local police send proceeds to D.C., which then returns money to
the local police agency, who are after all, primarily tax collectors! State
law doesn't necessarily matter! You aren't accused of a crime, your property
is! When police in Utah---bullies on a power trip--- were told they had to
turn over seized assets to a public education fund, they stopped making
seizures since they couldn't keep the money for themselves. Who are the
lawbreakers now? Those who claim to be enforcing law! Police constantly want
more power and less accountability! We are in an extremely perilous situation
until they are drastically curtailed! That means forcing them to undergo
personality profiles, and the misfits are dismissed, not to be rehired
elsewhere. The same thing took place in Kansas City, with the police keeping
millions in seizure funds that was supposed to go to public schools (Kansas
City Star, October 19, 1996, page 1).
A Dallas attorney in a high-profile case commented that "the police
don't know sheetrock from cocaine," in that case, we are all guilty! It
would be an attitude improvement if police would think of their fellow
Americans as "citizens" rather than "civilians," a term
an occupying army would use! Since Ms. Blumner has the power of the press
behind her, she is probably safe from retaliation. I have sent this item to
her so she can see the reference to her fine editorial and the need to
reference all types of property against official theft. By calling them on
something before they attempt it, a deterrent measure is accomplished. My
friends, you are all going to have to do what you dread worse than your
doctor telling you that you're a terminal patient. You have to give up time
watching professional sports, going golfing or playing card games, so you can
have time to become politically active. We will improve the situation in no
other way! Public officialdom is often in a septic tank condition with regard
to their morality. Don't you wish to avoid going through what Franklin
Sanders has endured?
Will Uncle Sam drive all silver underground? Next month I will have an
article about how our rights as metals investors are under threat, and
witch-hunt type asset seizure is part of that threat. If we don't take
action, we are subject to losing everything, understand, everything! Paper
money creators have no moral limits on what tyranny they will set in motion
to stop precious metals from being used as money. Conceal your silver well!
You might try an ancient Japanese method called "hiding behind the
light," in which the searched after target cannot be found because it is
"behind the searchlight." This may take some interpretation on your
part, so exercise your imagination. Resist the temptation to divulge how much
precious metals you have acquired. WSJ, February 1, 1980, page 30 had these
remarks (that time the police were acting properly)---
"Detroit area police say the big rush by the public to unload silver
heirlooms has made it hard for them to trace stolen goods. Thieves have
discovered that established dealers buying silver provide them with a
profitable, risk-free fencing outlet, police say. Dealers pay better prices
than fences, who typically offer as little as 10 cents on the dollar. The
risk is minimal because the silver is melted down in short order. "Our
biggest problem is that dealers aren't asking for identification," says
detective Jack Kalbfleisch of the Birmingham, Michigan police. He and other
law enforcement officials are skeptical of dealers' claims that they are
unwitting accomplices. "People come in with pillowcases or paper bags
filled with silverware," he says. "The dealers buy from anyone of
any age and there's no regulation covering it." Of particular concern
are dealers who rent hotel rooms, advertise in local newspapers and after
taking in silver, leave town. As evidence of dealers' complicity, James
Ahearn, chief investigator for the Oakland County, Michigan, prosecutor's
office, notes that arrested thieves report they are getting only 50% of the
going rate for silver from dealers. Detroit police hope to require dealers to
ask for identification, and to hold silver items long enough for them to
check files of stolen goods."
I very strongly urge that you lay out your silver in such a way that you can
make good photographic records of it (with dates on the photos), showing your
whole metal inventory broken down by category, and with your face in each
photo, to establish later, if need arises, that this was/is indeed your
silver or other metals, so our dear Government can't suggest you stole it and
therefore should forfeit it. Large investors may consider affidavits signed
by metals dealers attesting to purchaser status, with duplicate documentation
and photographs stored by their attorneys. You should also record all visible
serial numbers on bullion. If you have these photos developed by a
photofinisher, use one from out of state. Ship film and receive prints
through a rented post-office box or through an office address. You know the
film developers location. They don't need to know yours. Those with greater
assets may wish to install hidden cameras where record of hostile events
could take place, to convict burglars, or defend against state sponsored
despotism.
SILVER, MACHINE GUNS, HOLDUPS AND BURGLARIES!
The Wall Street Journal ran a story titled, "As Gold, Silver Soar, Metal
Mania Strikes, And So Do Burglars" (January 9, 1980, page 1). In
Princeton, New Jersey, thieves were melting down silver objects in getaway
vans. The Carlton House Hotel in Pittsburgh even had silver PLATED tableware
removed. Detroit dealers ran ads promising police protection. People were so
frantic to hide their silver, that sometimes they couldn't remember all the
stash locations! Upscale neighborhoods united to hire Pinkerton's security
patrols to protect their valuables, to include gold, and high-grade diamonds,
which were also soaring. Sales of home safes jumped 30% in one week. Jewelry
appraisal business also jumped, because of rapidly escalating prices. The
article reported that even beauty salons opened up gold and silver buying
departments! There is the chance that diamonds may once again take off with
rising silver prices, as before. Again on the matter of being tight-lipped as
to your silver or other metals holdings, you could mention this to someone
who would never move against you, but gossip being what it is, that person
could pass word on to others without ethics. Before you answer your doorbell,
look out a window to see if it's someone you recognize. You might want to
post a sign visible up close---"Warning! Pit Bull/Timber wolf hybrids
inside!" However, that could suggest you have something to hide, some
people use sound recordings. Be ready to thwart a home invasion! Shotguns are
best up close and are often maintained by metals dealers. It would be nice if
we lived in an ideal society in which protection was unnecessary. Poverty
drives some to desperation. Something potentially useful would be, buy the
biggest work boots you can find and leave them on the front porch---make them
think you're huge! Difficult though it may be, I suggest that the best
prepared physical holders will store little of it at their residence or
office, and definitely not at a bank or with a metals dealer who doesn't need
his security problems heightened. Under the paragraph subtitle "Armed
Clerks In Chicago," the Wall Street Journal, June 20, 1968, page 1 related---
"Item: On Chicago's North Side yesterday, individuals were lined up all
day outside the offices of E.B. "Red" Strauss, who, like Mr.
Dantone, has been buying silver certificates from the public at a markup. He
took in $650,000 of the bills Friday and Saturday alone, paying up to $1.70
for each $1 face amount of bills. His 10 clerks are armed with pistols, while
two hired guards, one toting a submachine gun, roam the premises to protect
against theft."
Monday, June 24, 1968, was the deadline set for redeeming silver certificates
in metal, and the stampede for redemption was on. About one week earlier, the
Treasury ran out of .999 fine bullion for redemption, and started offering
.900 and even silver granules for redemption, partially defaulting. An
elderly man called Ira Goldberg of Superior Stamp & Coin in Los Angeles a
"dirty thief," as the man was told the trading value declined due
to the decline in purity of metal for redemption (same story, page 22).
Returning to the front page, we find---
"Item: At an undisclosed time today, B.J. Dantone, owner of the
Peachtree Coin Shop in Atlanta, will board a jet for New York with a suitcase
containing $100,000 face amount of silver certificates he has purchased from
dozens of individuals at a total cost of $148,000. Accompanied by two
off-duty Atlanta policemen acting as bodyguards, Mr. Dantone will attempt to
unload his certificates through a big New York coin dealer for a handsome
profit. By midnight, he will be on a flight home; the New York dealer,
presumably, will be waiting for the Federal Reserve office to open in the
morning. There, he will exchange the certificates for a receipt entitling him
to withdraw silver valued at about $195,000 at open-market prices from the
U.S. Assay Office."
Notice three items---this paper money was worth something, because you could
EXCHANGE IT FOR SILVER (by a deadline); awareness that there was a silver
shortage and crisis was commonplace, and this created a stampede; and
security---armed security was involved because true value was present!
Finally, the article commented (page 22)---
"The acknowledged "Mr. Big" of silver certificate trading is
Pep Levin, who operates out of Camden, N.J. From January through next
Monday's deadline, Mr. Levin estimates he will have purchased about 22
million silver certificates for about $35 million. His biggest deal so far
was 441,000 certificates he bought last month from a Chicago coin dealer for
$750,000, but he also buys directly from amateurs, although the latter
generally receive lower prices. Not surprisingly, Mr. Levin is highly
conscious of security. He keeps eight armed guards inside his establishment
and owns two armored cars. When a seller arrives from out of town, Mr. Levin
meets him at the airport and drives him to his place of business in one of
the armored cars. He never deals in bullion itself; the certificates he buys
are sold to the largest silver bullion broker in England."
Over $100 million of silver certificates were redeemed for silver by the
deadline (WSJ, June 28, 1968, page 3). The Journal, May 27, 1969, page 8,
reported that in two weeks since the lifting of the coin-melting ban by the
Feds, Pep Levin bought less than $100,000 face of silver coins, about one
third the amount he anticipated. The reason his goal came up short? Prices on
the COMEX were too low to encourage people to sell---
"He doesn't think he will be more successful at buying coins until the
price of silver climbs to $2 an ounce from the current level of near $1.75
that traders are willing to pay for an ounce of the refined metal on the
Commodity Exchange of New York."
The Journal ran a story on June 22, 1978, page 6, "Truck With Cargo Of
Precious Metals Taken by Gunmen," subtitled, "Handy & Harman
Shipment Valued at $1 Million Is Waylaid in Connecticut." Perhaps the
metals-transporters should watch the John Wayne/Kirk Douglas film "The
War Wagon" (1966) to take pointers as to how to securely ship precious
metal! On September 17, 1998, Las Vegas casino heir Ted Binion was allegedly
poisoned by his girlfriend and her lover. That was the same fellow who built
an underground vault in the desert near Pahrump, Nevada, in which he stored
some $8 million in silver, including 100,000 silver dollars, one of which
later sold for $10,000 (Las Vegas Review Journal, May 20, 2002). Maybe you
should take care as to who prepares your food and drink, people will kill for
far less than $8 million. This would be an appropriate time for the reader to
review "Guns And Silver" here in the Archives. Like Bruce Lee said in
"Enter The Dragon (1973)---
"Why doesn't someone pull a 45 and bang, settle it?"
Hide your silver well in multiple locations and be ready to defend it, an
attitude of a grizzly bear defending its kill is necessary. As the villain
Mr. Han said in that film---
"It is strength that makes all other values possible!"
Friends, I have said several things here that can be interpreted as alarmist
or sensationalistic. I hope events prove me wrong. The lunatic fringe says
space aliens will take your silver; the real danger is from your fellow man
acting under color of "for national security." I would rather be
viewed as having crackpot tendencies, than to be proved correct. But I don't
believe there are any moral restraints on the enemies of silver money to stop
them from attempting extreme measures. Like, give us all your silver, then we
open fire on you anyway and turn you into opium addicts (see last month).
Wall Street and government have colluded many times to hurt people, they are
more suspect than ever. This includes especially those with anti-corruption
reputations. Watch Congress, follow news reports, and be alert for disastrous
propositions against metals investors! There are several financier sponsored
economist organizations more than willing to declare that citizens have no
business owning gold and silver. We have Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee
(note how unfriendly the media have been towards them), but we need a
full-blown permanent legislative lobby to shield metals investors, the same
way the NRA shields gun owners. I believe unless we can form this lobby,
eventually, we're all quits as to our metals and mining shares. If someone
else gets the credit, I don't care. I don't want to be more than a rank and
file member. Anyone who wants to be a trustee or official needs to be looked
at under 50,000x magnification first.
Next month I will issue an emergency appeal to the metals community to take
action, and provide suggestions. If we don't have the beginnings of the
needed lobby before the next President takes office, I will consider
unloading everything I have related to silver, and you should too. I'd rather
transfer the risk to others and come away with something, than to lose
everything by legislation sponsored by the paper money creators. Perhaps the
Bank of England sponsored Group of 30 in Washington has already drafted the
necessary legislation to strip us of our rights. No wonder they maintain a
link to the CFTC, and the CFTC has done nothing to stop silver shorts. Silver
suppression has emanated from London for 132 years! Details last month and
next! Below, images of Silverwriter and a prominent silver executive, rushing
to add more silver and ore reserves before the Silver Stampede of 2004 starts
among the general public. (An endorsement of the viewpoints I have expressed
is NOT implied, nor necessarily on the part of Silver Investor. Everyone will
speak for themselves as to what their viewpoints are, when the time is right
for them. There is NO editorial content on the part of any silver company, in
anything I've written.) Stock certificates have their purposes, but those
100-ounce bars feel more substantial!
Photos made possible by the magic of SILVER!
|
|