STOP Everything! - If You Own SILVER, You Need to See THIS NOW! | Peter Schiff
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PT27M24SAndy Schectman reveals that tens of millions of ounces of silver have been physically delivered on COMEX in just a few weeks, indicating that governments, industrial giants and institutional investors are quietly stockpiling the metal as a critical strategic resource—a development he says mainstream media is ignoring. He argues that this unprecedented move from paper contracts to real delivery signals a structural re‑pricing of silver (and gold) and warns investors that continued exposure to synthetic markets could leave them vulnerable as the metal’s true scarcity and monetary value become widely recognized.
PT24M35SI’m ready whenever you are—just let me know what you’d like help with!
PT27M16SIn this interview Andy Schectman outlines why he believes silver is poised to break $100 – citing a 45‑year cup‑and‑handle pattern, the 7:1 geologic extraction ratio, a gold‑silver ratio around 45, and mounting supply bottlenecks from China, Swiss refiners and tightened CME margins that force real delivery rather than paper trading. He warns that these structural shifts turn silver from a speculative trade into a strategic, inflation‑hedging asset, with institutional buyers and sovereign funds accumulating physical metal while retail traders face squeezes.
PT25M43SMatthew Piepenburg warns that while silver still has significant upside—potentially reaching $250‑$300 and beyond—the metal’s extreme volatility means investors should base entry, exit and profit targets on gold‑silver ratios, central‑bank demand and real‑value metrics rather than headline dollar prices. He stresses that trying to time pull‑backs is futile; a disciplined, long‑term focus on ratio‑driven allocations and occasional profit‑taking is the only way to preserve purchasing power and avoid being shaken out of the market.
PT24M27SIn this interview veteran investor Rick Rule warns that the silver rally is coming to an end, noting that only about 18 % of silver comes from primary mines, that higher prices won’t quickly unlock new production, and that the original “hate‑driven” speculative thesis has already been fulfilled. He urges viewers to lock in gains, shift capital into higher‑quality silver stocks, gold and other under‑invested commodities such as copper, oil, gas and rare‑earths, and to brace for heightened volatility as supply constraints and geopolitical shifts reshape the metals market.
PT30M3SIn this video Peter Schiff warns that the silver market has entered a structural bull phase, with prices already up about 12 % in early 2026 and support now around $70‑$75 per ounce, making physical silver increasingly scarce and premiums set to surge. He urges investors to buy physical silver (and related mining stocks) now rather than wait for a pullback, explaining how rising silver prices lower gold miners’ costs, boost cash flow, and signal a broader precious‑metals rally that could outpace stocks and even challenge Bitcoin’s “digital gold” narrative.
PT25M29Ssentences.In this episode Gary Wagner argues that as long as silver stays above $71 (and gold above $4,300), the recent dip‑buying is a normal pullback—not a true correction—showing the metals are still running on full‑engine momentum despite market noise. He warns investors not to mistake minor volatility for a trend reversal, stressing that the real risk is misreading consolidation and exiting too early while the underlying bullish structure remains intact.
PT26M1Ssentences.Rafi Farber warns that silver’s current $77‑$85 range is deceptive, as imminent margin hikes could trigger massive forced liquidations that may lock up the entire futures market and cause extreme price swings. He stresses that silver should be treated as a monetary hedge—favoring physical ownership over leveraged derivatives—to protect portfolios when systemic stress hits.
PT27M38S.Michael Oliver argues that silver has finally broken out of its 50‑year, $0.50‑$50 range and could surge to several hundred dollars per ounce, echoing the regime‑shifts historically seen in copper, lead and gold. He warns that the greater danger is under‑allocation, as rising long‑term bond yields and mounting fiscal stress are poised to drive capital into hard assets and sustain a multi‑year rally in silver.
PT23M42S.In this video, David Morgan reveals how major industrial players such as Samsung and Tesla are quietly locking in long‑term silver supply through off‑take agreements, while export‑control headlines mask a continuing five‑year global deficit that could push prices toward $100‑$200 per ounce. He argues that we are already in the acceleration phase of the silver cycle—driven by AI, data‑center electrification and new U.S. critical‑minerals stockpiling—so small investors must position now rather than wait for spot‑price hype.
PT28M44SAndy Schectman explains that the historic gold‑to‑silver ratio of roughly 42:1 implies silver could reasonably reach $100‑$200 an ounce, especially with the January delivery surge, forced Bloomberg index rebalancing and institutional players scrambling to take physical delivery. He warns that while price swings will be volatile, the true driver is a tightening supply‑side—dwindling primary mining, major banks and countries stockpiling metal, and China’s export restrictions—rather than speculative hype.
PT27M41SFrancis Hunt explains why the Shanghai silver market now sets the true price, highlighting a growing premium over Western futures, rapid margin hikes that curb speculation, and tightening physical supply as China restricts exports and manufacturers secure metal directly from mines. He argues that investors should watch the gold‑silver ratio (selling silver when it falls below 10) and view silver’s industrial demand and supply scarcity as the primary driver of a potential multi‑digit price surge.
PT18M16SIn this interview Clem Chambers outlines why silver could surge toward $100‑$120 as gold climbs on war‑driven buying and a tight free‑float, but stresses that you should only invest if you fully understand the downside and have a clear thesis. He warns that geopolitical tensions, AI‑related supply‑chain dynamics, and modest monetary expansion—not a dying dollar—are the real catalysts, making disciplined risk management essential before committing capital.
PT24M51SSilver is on the brink of a rapid, explosive rally—potentially soaring to $200 in the next six months—as a historic compression of the silver‑to‑gold ratio, a structural supply‑demand deficit from high‑tech and solar demand, and massive monetary expansion converge to unleash pent‑up price pressure. Michael Oliver also points to similar breakout patterns in copper, lead and gold, noting that metals have finally broken out of a decade‑long base versus equities, signalling a new regime shift for investors.
PT27M12S.Peter Schiff argues that the recent pull‑back in silver just confirmed a breakout above the historic $50 resistance, leaving the market comfortably above $70 and on track for his $100 target by next year, while also highlighting that the volatility stemmed from margin hikes rather than a genuine end to the rally. He warns that skepticism around the metal is actually a bullish signal and emphasizes that a weakening U.S. dollar, central‑bank gold buying, and broader metals strength will keep silver and other hard assets in a multi‑year uptrend.
PT29M17SIn this video Chris Vermeulen breaks down the recent explosive swing in silver—highlighting margin‑call pressure, a bearish engulfing candle, and a bubble‑like rally that could briefly push prices toward $100 before settling into a new floor around $40‑$50. He then warns that a sharp correction is likely in 2026 for silver and other precious metals, drawing parallels to the 2007 cycle and urging investors to focus on disciplined timing rather than blind conviction.
PT28M52S.Michael Oliver warns that silver, long suppressed by a supply deficit and a pricing structure tied to base‑metal mining, is entering a rapid “new reality” where prices could surge into the $200‑$300 range, driven by AI‑related industrial demand and a breakout in its gold‑silver spread. He highlights that unlike other commodities, silver’s price signals don’t prompt additional production, making the upcoming volatility and potential overshoot a structural market correction rather than a temporary rally.
PT24M21SIn this video, Gareth Soloway analyzes the future of silver prices, suggesting a potential pullback of about 30% before moving towards $100 by 2027. He emphasizes the momentum-driven nature of silver trading and the importance of distinguishing between speculative trading and long-term fundamentals as the market prepares for significant corrections.
PT19M49SIn this episode, Gareth Soloway explains why silver’s recent 10% surge is a momentum‑driven rally born from massive fiscal deficits and quantitative easing, and why the historically decades‑long bear markets for silver are now compressing to just a few years. He projects aggressive price targets—around $100 per ounce for silver and $5,000 for gold—while warning investors to focus on cycle timing and disciplined rebalancing rather than chasing short‑term gains.
PT25M38Soutput.Former mining analyst Francis Hunt argues that the current macro‑debt squeeze and a fundamental supply shortfall have set up a generational silver bull market that could surge past $333 per ounce, reach an interim technical target of $9,056, and eventually break into four‑digit territory while the gold‑to‑silver ratio collapses into single digits. He backs the forecast with the HVF (natural geometry) method, a 60‑year volatility‑compression structure, and warns that investors who ignore the impending regime shift risk missing a violent price catch‑up.
PT25M17SLet's output.Jeffrey Christian debunks the prevailing silver‑shortage panic, showing that the metal hasn’t vanished but has simply been moved between COMEX, London and India due to arbitrage, and that refineries were flooded with retail bars, causing price suppression rather than a true supply deficit. He warns that the recent price rally is driven by investors finally stopping sales and hoarding—a pattern that historically precedes sharp upside—and notes that while gold is more accessible through ETFs and coins, it remains a peripheral asset rather than a mainstream investment.
PT25M59SIn this video, Peter Krauth shares his insights on the current state of the silver market, highlighting the significant physical tightness and looming supply deficits that could reshape price dynamics. He explains how increased demand from major consumers like China and India, coupled with stagnant mining production, has set the stage for potential market volatility and corrections, urging investors to adopt a cautious and disciplined approach.
PT23M7S.In this interview, Michael Oliver argues that silver is set to break its 50‑year $4‑to‑$50 range and could surge to $200‑plus within a few quarters as it outperforms equities, a shift he illustrates with logarithmic charts and historical breakouts in copper and gold. He ties the breakout to a looming fiat‑currency crisis and institutional reallocation, suggesting a rapid regime change that will reshape portfolio risk assumptions.
PT28M3SDurrett explains that a looming one‑time liquidation of about a billion ounces held in SLV and PSLV ETFs could temporarily shave $20‑$25 off silver’s price, after which dwindling inventories and rising margins could push the metal toward $500 per ounce, with the floor already climbing from $45 to $50 as gold approaches $5,000. He urges investors to stay patient through the early innings of the cycle, holding silver and gold miners until gold reaches the $5,000 level, because the expanding margins and supply squeeze could generate extraordinary long‑term gains.
PT30M6SIn this urgent video, Bill Holter warns that silver owners in the United States have only weeks to prepare for potential upheaval in financial markets, emphasizing the importance of owning junk silver and pre-1933 gold as protective measures against executive orders threatening confiscation. He highlights a significant structural shift where rising global demand and declining purchasing power of fiat currencies may lead to a drastic reevaluation of precious metals, urging viewers to recognize the critical implications for their asset strategies.
PT24M17S.Chris Vermeulen explains that silver is currently in a late‑cycle rally, targeting $70‑$80 per ounce but likely to face a 38‑50% Fibonacci pullback into the $43‑$50 range. He warns that the surge is driven by crowd psychology rather than fundamentals, urging disciplined investors to manage risk as the metal’s volatility can far exceed gold’s and trigger rapid drawdowns.
PT25M11SEric Sprott explains that decades of concentrated bank shorting have forced silver far below its natural gold‑to‑silver ratio, and recent Chinese export bans combined with a surge in physical demand are exposing this structural mispricing. He argues that solid‑state battery breakthroughs and a shifting allocation toward precious metals could drive silver toward $150‑$200 per ounce, creating a massive upside for investors.
PT23M37Stwo sentences.Vince Lanci explains that a growing physical shortage of deliverable silver—exacerbated by JPMorgan’s removal of millions of ounces during the Black‑Friday shutdown and an outsized paper futures market that far exceeds annual mine output—has produced a pattern of sharp V‑shaped price spikes and hints at an imminent squeeze. He cautions investors that the market is transitioning from speculative, paper‑driven moves to a regime where real metal availability and east‑ward price discovery drive volatility, so long‑term positions should be based on physical fundamentals rather than leveraged bets.
PT23M18SIn this interview Lobo Tigre explains why the recent surge of silver to near‑$70 oz is driven by idiosyncratic supply constraints rather than a lasting monetary‑metal rally, and why he sees a near‑term correction as a buying opportunity while warning that silver “catch‑up” often signals cycle fatigue. He also contrasts silver’s performance with gold, copper and uranium, argues that institutional shifts toward higher gold allocations signal a structural change, and maintains a long‑term bullish thesis for all three monetary metals despite the current dynamics.
PT22M49Stwo sentences.In this episode, Gareth Soloway breaks down silver’s recent 33% rally, highlighting a potential $70‑$75 price target, a likely 20% correction to roughly $54, and the key trend‑line and resistance levels that could signal a stall. He then broadens the discussion to gold, overall metals dynamics, and the influence of Fed policy and macro‑economic trends, urging investors to prioritize positioning and risk‑reward over headline hype.