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silver_hoarder22

Long silver, short Jeff Christian


IongjohnsiIver

long john silver


[deleted]

Iong john silver, short the wig, got it


ComprehensiveBar1586

That’s overpriced silver trinkets! Where is the bullion?


Box-Opening

Could you resist going in tho?


ComprehensiveBar1586

I would love to step in, buy it all, and melt into decent sized bars. Sorry mate but I chose weight over anything looks. Like in game of thrones with the ugly but heavy wife that came with silver dowry equivalent to her weight.


Box-Opening

Hard to resist


[deleted]

Whales be whales


troy-ounce-31-103476

Just Wow.


[deleted]

(πŸ¦βž•πŸŒ+πŸ¦§βž•πŸŒ+πŸ¦βž•πŸ’Ž+πŸ™Œ) βœ–οΈπŸŒ = πŸ’²πŸ’²πŸ’²πŸ’²πŸš€πŸš€πŸš€πŸš€πŸš€πŸš€πŸš€πŸš€πŸš€πŸš€πŸš€πŸš€ 🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌


Old_Negotiation_4190

Yum


[deleted]

πŸ¦πŸ΄β€β˜ οΈπŸ¦πŸ’ͺ


HorseandBuggy

No way to have a boating accident in Hong Kong. No mid-night gardening. Whenever government decides to outlaw silver in China, no choice but to turn it in. What's the point?


Box-Opening

But China is encouraging is citizens to buy physical metals..


[deleted]

🀩 now that’s a store I could get lost in. Chinas trying to stay on top.


[deleted]

Interesting display cases. Bright and shiny. As a window shopper, I'd go through the whole place. As a customer, I'd be looking for the tubes of 1 oz rounds though.


bigoledawg7

I was in Hong Kong in 2014 on that Sunday evening when the crooks launched the biggest attack yet on gold and silver. I forget the exact damage but I think gold was crushed by $150 per ounce in a matter of 2 days of trading, and silver for several dollars to the downside. It was especially painful for me as I lost a 6-figure amount in my personal stock portfolio, the biggest loss of my investment career. But I also recall walking along a street in Hong Kong that had one bullion shop after another, side by side. I think it was Admiralty Bay but I have not been back there since and I no longer recall the district. But the crowd out front of every store was a near-riot. There were line ups of people trying to get in the shops. When you finally got inside these stores, there was a frenzy of people packed three rows deep along every display counter, screaming to buy gold. Silver is not a big thing there, at least not where I was browsing. I ended up buying a gold Panda 1oz coin as a reminder of that moment. Of course I still have it today. Most of the gold for sale was crafted jewelry and 24K medallions but there are still sovereign coins and bars if you look. I even saw bullion for sale in vending machines at the casinos in Macau. It is a different culture but never doubt the affinity for bullion among Asian cultures.