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fiftybagger
7th April 2010, 06:19 PM
http://i298.photobucket.com/albums/mm246/johnlf/Silverflag-1.jpg

Grog
7th April 2010, 06:57 PM
If it hits 25, I will be happy and sell 25% of my holdings and accelerate the land purchase I've been planning.

Plastic
7th April 2010, 07:28 PM
I may sell part of my silver when it trades at parity with gold, that is the only way I am gonna rent a dredge and haul it to the lake.

Ahhhh beloved pipe dreams... *puffs*

StackerKen
7th April 2010, 10:20 PM
I think I might sell a little when she gets to $35

Defender
7th April 2010, 11:55 PM
What's all this chatter from such weak hands? Selling at $35? :o :'(

When GSR = 5:1 I'll trade some silver for gold.
When GSR = 1:1 I'll trade some more silver for gold.
When I can trade ounces for acres I'll do some of that.

But selling? When big silver users fly me in their corporate jets to some plush resort to discuss my selling a few ounces - then maybe I'll possibly consider thinking about it.

Saul Mine
8th April 2010, 12:26 AM
Sell? WTF are you going to buy with the FRNs?

Grog
8th April 2010, 06:50 AM
Sell? WTF are you going to buy with the FRNs?

Me? It will be either land or Gold at that point. Depending on what is a better deal at the time. Neither are bad IMO.

StackerKen
8th April 2010, 10:54 AM
Sell? WTF are you going to buy with the FRNs?



More silver when it dips back to 30

Or maybe those solar panels Ive been wanting


and I just said I would sell "some"....not even close to all of it. :)

Phil_Schnieder
8th April 2010, 12:49 PM
Solar panels, Batteries, Inverter(s), Wind turbine(VAWT), Fertile land, Guns, and Seeds would make good purcases IMO.

Infact, I am glad you mentioned them StackerKen...Funny too as the panels make use of the precious metal for storing/transferring energy.

This is a interesting read: http://www.rapidtrends.com/2009/04/23/silver-use-in-solar-panels-electrical-components-and-next-generation-cars-ted-butler/


Silver use in solar panels, electrical components, and next generation cars: Ted Butler
A Blast From The Past

By: Theodore Butler & James R. Cook

When you follow silver and think about it as intensively as I do, it’s hard not to focus on the day-to-day developments. But it’s also important to step back and try to look at things years or even decades ahead. It is easy to get caught up in what’s happening now, but true foresight encompasses a much longer time frame. Get the long term right and you don’t have to sweat the short term.

For several months or longer, on almost a subconscious level, I have been thinking about the long term in regards to silver and electricity. I first wrote on this topic eight years ago, in just the 14th (of more than 300) article I’ve written for Investment Rarities http://www.investmentrarities.com/06-27-01.html

Silver has unique properties which makes it superior to any other substance. Importantly, it is the best conductor of electricity. This means that electricity travels faster while less of it is lost with silver as the conductor. If there is one thing that has impacted the world over the past 100 years it is the widespread use of electricity. Copper is the second best conductor of electricity and costs much less than silver. About 750 times more copper is mined than silver and much more of it is used in electrical applications. But when performance is critical, silver is the electrical king.



In my original article, I looked into future applications of silver in solar (photovoltaic), electric or hybrid vehicles and superconductors. In all three applications we have come a long way and hardly any way at all, given the journey ahead. Some recent developments suggest that the pace is about to pick up for the consumption of silver.

Since 2001, the production and proliferation of solar panels and solar-powered devices has been impressive. The future for solar power looks almost limitless. And why not? Solar power is the cleanest and cheapest form of electrical generation once installed. It’s the greenest of the green. Installation costs, while still formidable, are declining yearly. Silver plays an important role in collecting and concentrating the electrical current from photovoltaic cells. Another form of solar uses silver back mirrors to concentrates the sunlight.

The production and sale of hybrid vehicles has exploded since 2001, with Toyota’s Prius a common sight on the roads. These gas/electrical battery vehicles dramatically extend miles per gallon. When gasoline prices were at their peak, there were waiting lists for these autos. Honda is now introducing an even more affordable version, and many manufacturers will add hybrids or all-electrical vehicles soon. This electrical transmission requires silver to insure performance in batteries, contacts and switches.

China recently embarked on an ambitious long-term plan to become the leader in world production and sales of all-electric vehicles. China has recently emerged as the world’s largest producer and consumer of gas-powered vehicles. But China knows the limitation that gasoline-powered vehicles have in its future. They have decided to leapfrog gas and hybrid production to become the leader in all-electric powered vehicles. There should be no doubt that this requires vast quantities of silver.

When I wrote about superconductivity in 2001, the main promise was for electrical transmission. Some studies have shown that as much as a third of all electricity produced is lost in its transmission over high-powered wires (mostly aluminum). No, I’m not suggesting that silver will replace aluminum in high-powered transmission wires. Due to the cost and weight that’s not feasible. Besides, there’s hardly enough silver available as it is.

However, an announcement just this week, from the new Administration has focused attention on the electrical grid in our country. It is operating on a system that is essentially 100 years old. It is inefficient and loses too much electricity in transmission. As the world’s best conductor of electricity, silver will play an important role in the new technology and devices developed to increase the efficiencies of the grid.

Like China, we will also be producing and using all-electric cars in the near-future. As these vehicles are plugged in to be recharged, tremendous new strains will be placed the electrical grid. Where will the power come from? Only from new power generation and efficiency improvements in current transmission systems. All this requires silver in a wide variety of applications.

There will continue to be dramatic gains in solar power, electric vehicles and electrical transmission. The future will require significant quantities of silver. This will exert a powerful stimulus on silver prices. You should buy silver for its many electrical applications, not the least is the “charge” it can give to your financial well-being.

HE’S THE MAN

By James R. Cook

The most widely plagiarized person in American has to be our silver analyst, Theodore Butler. Virtually every article written on silver these days contains his original information and insights. His revelations have become the main body of knowledge on silver. The manipulation debate wouldn’t exist if not for him. Oddly enough, people writing about silver cite Ted’s research throughout their articles, but never mention his name. It’s as if they thought of it. He’s originated most everything there is to know about silver and when these writers repeat it (verbatim in some cases), they conveniently forget the source. It’s amazing.

Ted Butler knows more about silver and the workings of the silver market than anyone on earth. He’s proved to be an embarrassment to the regulators at the Commodity Futures Trading Commission because he knows more than they do. He’s got the experience they lack. This is an example of the shortcomings of regulation. Every industry is complex and it takes years to become an expert. That’s why regulation fails so often. The government is regulating industries they know very little about compared to those experts who work within the industry. That’s why an argument can be made that it’s better to have minimal regulation where the citizens look out for themselves rather than expect the government to look out for them. Bernie Madoff would have never got out of the starting gate if individual investors scrutinized him rather than trusting the SEC to do the job.

Because of Ted Butler’s expertise, he’s had a major influence on the market, something that’s never acknowledged. You can be sure that the investment demand for silver would never be this high without Ted. He has single-handedly uncovered numerous bullish factors about silver and widely disseminated this news. He has established a wide following because of the quality and clarity of his advice. He is responsible for the burgeoning interest in silver, the demand for coins and bars, and the large inflows of physical silver into institutional investment vehicles. The data he provides makes silver buyers stronger holders because in their minds they have established a much higher price target. The accuracy of his information and his personal integrity have made Ted Butler the biggest name in silver. A lot of people are paying attention and that can only be good for the price of silver.

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This entry was posted on Thursday, April 23rd, 2009 at 11:52 am and is filed under Archived. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

peachesinfla
10th April 2010, 05:31 AM
Sell? WTF are you going to buy with the FRNs?


I plan on buying a couple of those jap robot chicks and gifting one to old Ponce. ;D

Trinity
10th April 2010, 06:03 AM
You just know Silver is going to pass those 1980 highs sometime in the next few years. When it does then I will consider breaking out the shovel and maps.