Thursday, January 27, 2011

There was a big downturn in Silver today.

Are you still buying? I am glad I bought at $12 an ounce; but should I sell any? Most of you may say..."Noooo, never sell until $1,000 an ounce." But, the market may take metals down even further.

Monday, September 27, 2010

Sunday, April 4, 2010

Buy physical silver!!!

Check out the video:

Tuesday, March 2, 2010

PIIGS and How it Affects the World Markets


or PIGS is acronym used by international bond analysts, academics, and by the international economic press that refer to the economies of Portugal, Italy, Ireland, Greece, and Spain, especially in regards to matters relating to sovereign debt markets.

Today, Greece is in real trouble with it's debt. Many economists have weighed in with their take on Greece’s troubles and whether it will be able to make good on its debt obligations while still remaining part of the greater European Union.

One of the best ways to play this problem is to bet against the euro versus the U.S. dollar. Why?

* A fiscally weak Greece (plus the other so-called “PIIGS” nations) can drag down the entire Eurozone. That makes the euro less attractive versus other currencies – particularly the dollar.
* Interest rates will begin to rise in the United States – a development that will make dollar-denominated investments more attractive.
* The U.S. economy is rebounding faster than Europe’s. It notched up a 5.9% annualized GDP rate during the fourth quarter of 2009.

So you can see that the stars are aligning for a pro-dollar, anti-euro trade.
For years, Goldman Sachs and other firms have been loaning money to Greece in complex ways designed to keep the debt off Greece’s books and allow the country to officially stay within fiscal limits set by the European Union. Now the game is up: For that, the prime responsibility falls to Greece, and it is paying the consequences.

But betting either way is like having your money on a sinking ship, one is the Titanic the other the Lusitania. Both are doomed. It's true the dollar may see a deflationary period, before inflation sets in. This inflation may be world wide since most of the world's countries are in serious debt.

Now is the time to invest in gold and silver. Silver has the most upside potential.
The US government does not have any more silver in its strategic reserves.
The EU outlawed the use of lead in solder. So Europe uses silver - to solder stuff - but of course, they ship whatever needs to be soldered in large quantities - to China, where it is still legal. Despite the decrease of the use of silver in photography, its use in superconducting electrical equipment, plasma TV’s and electronics - will increase - as will the use of silver for conventional photography and X-rays in developing countries.

1792-2002 mean ratio of Gold to Silver is 31.32
Currently as I wrote this article the ratio is 1134.80/16.93=67.03.

Saturday, February 20, 2010

The Numis Network Compensation Plan


*Click Here*
to watch a series of videos on the compensation plan.
Call me at (406)570-5095 if you are interested in this opportunity.

http://numisone.com/ahmann

http://numisnetwork.com/ahmann

Better yet, check out younique!
http://www.youniquewealth.com/silver?page=youniquetube