Silver's "Controlled Demolition": The Truth Revealed
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Last Friday's apparent silver market crash wasn't just a simple dip; financial analysts are calling it a "controlled demolition" and a "psychological terror campaign." This coordinated effort aimed to panic paper silver derivative holders into selling at catastrophic losses.
The true goal was to allow certain entities to cover massive short positions and acquire physical metal at an artificial discount. While the paper market on exchanges like Comex faced chaos, the price has since recovered to a robust $79.39 an ounce, exposing the critical distinction between vulnerable digital entries and untouched physical silver.
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Transcript
What appeared to be a simple market crash in silver last Friday was, according to financial analysts, something far more deliberate, a controlled demolition. Headlines blared about the plunge, but insiders are calling it a psychological terror campaign. A coordinated effort to panic holders of paper silver derivatives into selling at catastrophic losses. The goal, to allow certain entities to cover massive short positions at a profit and acquire physical metal at an artificial discount. While the paper market on exchanges like the Comex was in chaos, the price has already recovered to a robust $79 and 39 cents an ounce. The real story lies in the critical distinction this event exposed. The crash vaporized digital entries, ETFs and futures contracts, but it could not touch a single ounce of physical silver in a vault or a safe. This was a brutal lesson in counterparty risk. The fundamental case for the metal remains stronger than ever, driven by relentless industrial demand from solar panels to electronics, far out pacing mine supply. Meanwhile, media narratives blaming the plunge on Fed policy are being dismissed as a convenient cover story. A misdirection to obscure what analysts describe as financial warfare. The ultimate ...