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Canadian_Nickle
Penny Hoarding Member


Canada
938 Posts

Posted - 09/26/2006 :  15:20:55  Show Profile Send Canadian_Nickle a Private Message
By Steve James and Rachelle Younglai

DENVER, Sept 25 (Reuters) - At North America's major annual gold industry conference, the talk on Monday was about silver -- and how the price of bullion's less attractive rival could climb even higher.

"I think silver will be potentially more explosive than gold," Ian Telfer, chief executive of Goldcorp. (G.TO: Quote, Profile, Research), told Reuters during the Denver Gold Forum.

Telfer, who said he was "really bullish" on silver, predicted the price could hit $20 per ounce in the next two years.


Phil Baker, chief executive officer of Hecla Mining Co. (HL.N: Quote, Profile, Research), agreed, saying during his presentation: "We see a lot of potential for it to go even higher.

"Fundamental indications are very good and with investment demand like we have not seen in two decades, we see the price continuing to rise."

Asked afterwards to be more specific, Baker told Reuters: "There will be volatility, but we will see the silver price generally rise in the $15-$20 range and stay in place for the next four to five years.

"There will be some input if the base metal complex falls, but what happens in the next five to 10 years, who knows? Maybe the mines will produce more than the market needs."

Silver, which hit a 23-year high in April of $13.38 per ounce, was selling on Monday for around $11.30. Since last year's Denver Gold Forum, the price of gold soared to its highest level in a quarter century. It is still higher than it was at the start of the year, even though it has dropped to around $580 per ounce from a high of $640

Telfer explained silver's change in fortunes thus: "The difference between silver and gold is that silver gets used up, gold doesn't. Gold just gets moved around, whereas silver gets used up so inventories of silver are low."

That's why he is bullish on silver -- a view shared by Coeur d'Alene (CDE.N: Quote, Profile, Research), the world's largest publicly traded silver producer.

"There is a bullish trend in the silver market and the prospects are for these conditions to continue," said Chief Financial Officer James Sabala. "That's because of a fundamental continued imbalance between mine supply, relatively low above-ground stocks and continued speculative interest.

"These factors caused silver prices earlier this year to reach their highest level in more than two decades. But our bullish view of the market goes beyond short-term excitement at the spike in prices," he told the Gold Forum.


The optimistic view of the market is largely based on the long-term growth in demand for silver, he said. "Silver is the world's most widely used metal above and beyond the well known uses in coins and photography."

He noted silver is used in electronics, water purification systems, health care, textiles and wood preservation. "Overall silver demand has been driven primarily by record-setting growth in industrial applications. We don't see any sign of a significant letdown in this segment," Sabala said.

Also the Electronic Trading Fund, which began trading in April, has already taken approximately 100 million ounces of silver off the market, he said. And although mine production rose last year it still lagged consumption for the 17th consecutive year.

"That's one of the reasons silver has outperformed gold in the recent market and we expect it to continue to do so."

Sabala said two-thirds of Coeur's revenue is from silver and it does not hedge silver or gold.


"We are poised to report strong production and low cash costs for 2006, with our net income for the first half of this year already exceeding that for the full year 2005," he said.

LarryB
New Member



Canada
24 Posts

Posted - 01/14/2007 :  05:52:46  Show Profile Send LarryB a Private Message
Hi there CN,

My silver guru, Theodore Butler, a silver analyst, has been telling folks to stock up on silver for a few years now. He writes about it often in "Market Update", a sort of newsletter put out by James Cooke, who of course sells silver and gold as securities to folks who are just a little bit brighter than yer average sheeple. He lists many, many reasons to try and grab as much silver as one can afford as often as possible.

It's all true what you show above. Silver IS going to go through the roof and it won't take too much longer to do it. There are less silver strikes out there these days than there are gold strikes, in the mining industry. Check it out if you don't believe it! The demand goes up, the supply goes down, points to you and me makin' out like bandits if we can hoard as much of the stuff as we can get our hands on.

Later,

Gettin' Rich... Slowly

LarryB
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n/a
deleted



479 Posts

Posted - 01/14/2007 :  10:27:53  Show Profile Send n/a a Private Message
Here's my two cents:

I buy and have bought mostly silver, a little gold, some nickles, copper, but 95% of my money has gone into real physical silver that I have in my own possesion.

Mines could produce a lot, but that is not very likely.
The photography portion of the market could collapse further.
Some (not all) of the industrial uses could get priced out.
Also, there could be a few big holders out there willing to sell, the Swiss banks, maybe the Rothschilds.

So, I don't see a sure linear progression of only up and up.

Nevertheless, I continue to buy at these prices.
The stocks of usable silver are low and the demand for USE is high.
See Theodore Butler's archives, here:
You must be logged in to see this link.


I hope to never spend any of it and leave it all to my children.
But spendable it is.
I recommend buying silver rounds, because they are spendable coins in a time of currency crisis.
I can't really imagine spending gold coins during a crisis except as bribes.
I can see spending silver coins for food or water or whatever.

90% "junk" silver, silver bars, etc. are less spendable, in my opinion.

.................................................
A billiard ball dropped from 1,362 feet (height of the South Tower) in a
vacuum would require 9.22 seconds to hit the ground. How then did the
towers collapse in 10 seconds and 11.4 seconds, and why has not one
member of the mainstream media insisted on honest answers from the
government in this regard?

"The individual is handicapped by coming face to face with a conspiracy
so monstrous [that] he cannot believe it exists."
- J. Edgar Hoover
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