I fully expect to see silver above $40/oz in my lifetime, although I am only 24.
It was over $40/oz in your lifetime already, like a couple years ago. Weak hands being shaken....
I fully expect to see silver above $40/oz in my lifetime, although I am only 24.
It was over $40/oz in your lifetime already, like a couple years ago. Weak hands being shaken....
Silver madness is scary.
Silver's in a hardcore bear market, no doubt about it...the bottom though may not be too much farther off at $13.
Silver's in a hardcore bear market, no doubt about it...the bottom though may not be too much farther off at $13.
Anybody know what the cost to extract an oz of silver is? What happens when the spot price is lower than the cost to extract?
operations
In 2013, Hecla's Greens Creek mine produced 7.4 million ounces of silver at an average cash cost per ounce of $4.42(1). Hecla currently produces silver from two silver mines, Greens Creek and Lucky Friday. The Lucky Friday mine resumed operations and production in early 2013 and produced 1.5 million ounces of silver. In June 2013, Hecla's acquisition of Aurizon Mines Ltd., brought Hecla the Casa Berardi gold mine located in Quebec, Canada, which produced 62,532 ounces of gold during the last seven months of 2013.
Let me tell you why the Cash Cost metric is so insane. When a mining company calculates its cash cost, it takes total production costs and subtracts various items including what they call, "By-product credits." All silver mining companies produce additional metals (included in the ore) such as copper, lead, zinc and gold.
For example, Endeavour Silver recorded a $7.92 cash cost an ounce in 2013. To get this low cash cost figure, Endeavour subtracted $111.5 million of by-product credits. This is a big amount when we consider that its total revenue for the year was $276.7 million. Thus, their by-product credits accounted for 40% of their total revenues.
The mining industry would like the investors to believe that by-product credits are a nice BONUS for mining silver.... which is why they only advertise that useless Cash Cost figure in their publications.
Again, using my formula, Endeavour Silver made an estimated $0.93 adjusted silver profit per ounce in 2013. Their average realized price for silver was $23.10 resulting in an estimated break-even of $22.17 last year. If we subtract their cash cost of $7.92 from their average realized price of $23.10, we would arrive at a hefty $15.18 cash profit.
That's right... $15.18 an ounce cash profit. Unfortunately, Endeavour Silver only stated a $11.1 million adjusted income gain for the year after selling 7.1 million oz of silver. If we multiply $15.18 million by 7.1 million oz, Endeavour should have enjoyed a $107.7 million cash profit in 2013..... they didn't.
Why? Because every primary silver mining company NEEDS ALL OF ITS BY-PRODUCT REVENUE to fortify its balance sheet. Can you imagine the losses Endeavour Silver would suffer if it excluded its by-product revenue??
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Umm, can you give any historical examples of this we're supposedly forgetting? Refresh our memories.don't forget that deflation comes first before any hints of hyperinflation.
For long term holders of PMs, don't forget that deflation comes first before any hints of hyperinflation. I think we're starting to see that deflation taking hold right now. Weak hands are being shaken out by this dive.
Umm, can you give any historical examples of this we're supposedly forgetting? Refresh our memories.
TheCount said:In the last 90 days, silver has dropped 16%. How much have food prices deflated in that same time period?
Prices? Who said anything about prices? Oh you mean that Keynesian measure of inflation. I don't follow that faulty metric.
I wish more people would understand this important point.
Productivity should have led to a decrease in prices over the last 100 years. We have only seen that in some sectors, and I'd bet even those prices would be much lower if the FED didn't keep creating more and more currency.
There are many historical episodes of hyperinflation, actually, just none (that I can think of offhand) where a period of deflation immediately preceded the hyperinflation.Nothing historical as far as hyperinflation is concerned,
I don't really understand what pattern you think you're seeing in those three dates.There's always deflation that leads to inflation (see: 1999/2007/2008)
I'd bet even those prices would be much lower if the FED didn't keep creating more and more currency.