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[posting]33271550[/posting]Hallo,

ich bin seit längerem stiller Mitleser in diesem Super-Thread und möchte erst mal allen Schreibern danken.

@ 5Sao:
deine klare Aussagen geben mir oftmals wertvolle Anregungen. Danke!
Allerdings möchte ich einen Hinweis geben zu

"Silver dagegen zusammen mit all andere Industrie Metal fallen, die Asiaten mögen sowieso keine Silver,..."

Ein sehr guter Artikel
http://news.silverseek.com/SilverSeek/1201716676.php

beschreibt die überragende Bedeutung von Silber für China:

Auszug:
"For a better understanding of the Chinese silver picture you have to know a little background of the role of silver in China. The facts are as follows. China has been on a silver standard since time immemorial. China stayed on the silver standard after other trading nations of the world demonetized silver and embraced the gold standard at the end of the 19th century. China’s external trade was insignificant, but the volume of silver currency for domestic use must have been enormous. In addition, there was an avalanche of silver from abroad raining on China. As the silver price fell over 75 percent from $1.29 in 1873 to $0.25 by 1932 (with a brief spike back to $1.29 at the end of World War I), other governments were dumping silver on China mercilessly. China was the only country on the silver standard and the Chinese central bank had to take all the silver offered to it at a fixed price. This situation lasted right up to 1949 when the Communists took over the government. In fact, several Western historians blame the Communist victory on the unprecedented silver inflation that Western governments inflicted on the Chinese economy by their insane silver dumping policy before World War II.

Nobody knows how much silver the Chinese Communists found in bank vaults and in the safe deposit boxes of Chinese merchants who fled the country, when they took over the mainland. Nobody knows how much silver is still hidden in the mattresses of Chinese peasants. The amounts must be enormous. The best estimate is that most of that silver has never been consumed and still exists in monetary form. China’s primitive economy under Mao was in no position to put that silver to industrial use. All that silver is now at the disposal of the Chinese government that could easily buy up silver coins scattered around the cities and in the countryside, at the present rising price of silver..."

In dem Artikel wird weiterhin vermutet/spekuliert, wie die Chinesen den Silbermarkt und den Silberpreis unter Kontrolle halten könnten.

Und das klingt mir nicht danach, dass Silber einfach so abstürzen könnte.

Sehr lesenswert!
 
aus der Diskussion: Das imaginäre Kurziel von 1000 USD........ und das Paradigma
Autor (Datum des Eintrages): 089MUC  (05.02.08 17:03:51)
Beitrag: 6,594 von 9,445 (ID:33274153)
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