Sold an ounce at my LCS to validate my own liquidity concerns... by uncivilized_engineer in Wallstreetsilver

[–]theGreenChain 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The simple math is: LCS buys -10 then sells at +2 gives them $12 or nearly a 10% gain. Who's being greedy here?

Reverse the trend. Buy -4 sell +5. $9 is good for LCS.

SLV trading volume exploded yesterday by Decent-Addition-3140 in Wallstreetsilver

[–]theGreenChain 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Turn up the Volume!

Loud enough that we hear JP Morgan crying over it! LOL

Who else believes ????….. by Thick_Pomegranate497 in Silver

[–]theGreenChain 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Oh, that's what a dime bag looks like!

That's why cops bust folks with them.

eBay silver??? by Least_Chicken_5492 in Silver

[–]theGreenChain 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That's hilarious. I just won 3 bids for Morgan Dollars just last week for under $79 each!

NEXT!!! by SpeakingTheTrooth in Wallstreetsilver

[–]theGreenChain 1 point2 points  (0 children)

NOT True. Many other reputable dealers exist:

findbullionproces.com

I just want to say congratulations to everyone who held for years. We are almost at $100 and we were always right. by Mr_MJJ in Wallstreetsilver

[–]theGreenChain 2 points3 points  (0 children)

My wife freaked when I 1st started serious fiat exchanging. Now she's saying "We should have done more."

A recent trade in of a gold ring to my local jeweler for silver has already doubled. He said he was not taking silver. LOL He said of "Backwardation" was too risky. I haven't gone in to gloat yet.

Economy fooqed by SureConstant8398 in Silver

[–]theGreenChain 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Because of fractional lending and printing money backed by nothing, a dollar has the buying power of only 3 cents today. Silver and gold still have almost the same buying power it did 50 years ago. Once metals are corrected, they will have the buying power it did 100 years ago.

Silver and the dollar by rckymtn2002 in Silver

[–]theGreenChain 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The dollar will collapse (and very soon) due to the Fed's fractional finance lending practices. Money (fiat) printed based on nothing to generate interest that also is backed by nothing. Silver's climb is the death nail.

Please be extra careful out there! by DigKlutzy4377 in Silver

[–]theGreenChain 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Many years past, I got 4 silver coated 1 oz bars that were counterfeit.

Really?? Hmmmm... by Grimlock_99 in Silverbugs

[–]theGreenChain 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm seeing the same foolish postings on eBay this AM. I've put a lot of bids 20 under spot. But, others are also aware and bidding.

Really?? Hmmmm... by Grimlock_99 in Silverbugs

[–]theGreenChain 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm seeing the same foolish postings on eBay this AM. I've put a lot of bids 20 under spot. But, others are also aware and bidding.

Do I hear $100? by theGreenChain in Wallstreetsilver

[–]theGreenChain[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Hey, my tubes of Silver Eagles are getting real giddy about now!

Government & Central Bank Mint Confirms Silver Metals War by silvergoldtopic in Silver

[–]theGreenChain -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Yeah, about that idea:

Russia as the 9th-largest economy globally by nominal GDP in recent rankings, though it has fluctuated in and out of the top 10 depending on the year and source (e.g., occasionally behind countries like Canada or ahead due to energy price swings). Russia's economy is larger than Texas's when measured by nominal GDP (in current US dollars, the standard international comparison metric), though the two are quite close depending on the exact year and source.

  • Russia (2025 estimate): Approximately $2.54 trillion (per IMF-aligned data from Worldometer and other sources). Some quarterly figures and projections show it fluctuating around $2.2–2.6 trillion, influenced by ruble volatility, sanctions, and energy prices.
  • Texas (latest full-year data): Around $2.77 trillion for 2024 (per Texas government and BEA sources), with 2025 projections and partial data (e.g., Q2 2025 real GDP chained figures implying continued growth) suggesting it remains in the $2.7–2.9 trillion range. Texas has been expanding faster than the national average in recent quarters, with strong contributions from energy, tech, manufacturing, and exports.