| Looks like it is time to dusk this one off again and take another look at it. 
 Noting that Warren Buffet has purchased 129 Million ounces of silver. We might want to revist CEF.
 
 As Oct 31, 1997 CEF had 6,565,000 ounces of silver and 131,000 ounces of gold.
 
 This eveving silver is trading around $6.98 per ounce.  Tomorrow everyone is going to know that Warren Buffet has started purchasing percious metals ...
 
 Tuesday February 3, 6:19 pm Eastern Time
 
 Berkshire owns large stake of world silver supply
 
 NEW YORK, Feb 3 (Reuters) - As the price of silver hit a nine-year high and supplies hit new lows, Warren
 Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway Inc [NYSE:BRKa - news] said it owns 129.7 million ounces of silver that it
 purchased in a six-month period between July 1997 and January 1998.
 
 Berkshire said in a press release issued on Tuesday that it it owns 129,710,000 ounces of silver, which it first
 purchased beginning on July 25, 1997 and last purchased Jan. 12 of this year. That represents more than 20
 percent of the world's estimated silver supply at 1997 year-end, according to metals market consulting firm
 CPM Group.
 
 The company said it normally would have published the information about its holdings in its annual report, due to
 be published next month, but released the figures early in response to inquiries.
 
 Precious metals markets have been roiled in the past week amid speculation that a leading participant had
 manipulated the market by transferring silver inventories from New York to London in order to create the
 impression of a supply shortage.
 
 NYMEX President Patrick Thompson said last Friday there was ''absolutely no basis'' for allegations the
 COMEX silver futures market was being manipulated.
 
 Silver prices soared to new nine-year highs Tuesday on the New York Mercantile Exchange's COMEX
 division. March silver climbed 36.7 cents to settle at $6.615 an ounce as COMEX stocks dwindled to 12-year
 lows of around 103.7 million ounces.
 
 Berkshire said it has accepted delivery of 87.51 million ounces and that the remaining 42.2 million ounces call for
 delivery at varied dates until March 6, 1998. To date, all deliveries have been made on schedule, it said.
 
 In its statement, Berkshire said that if any seller should have trouble making timely delivery, the company is
 willing to defer delivery for a reasonable period upon payment of a modest fee. It said all metal was purchased
 for London delivery through a single firm.
 
 No options have been or are held by Berkshire, it said.
 
 Berkshire said no purchases have been made that established new highs for the metal and that all buying
 occurred after dips. The company said it had no present plans for purchase or sale of its silver horde.
 
 At present, the silver position, at cost, amounts to less than 2 percent of the company's investment portfolio.
 
 The Berkshire statement said the company began accumulating the precious metal last summer after Buffett,
 Berkshire's chairman, and Charles Munger, its vice chairman, concluded that ''the equilibrium between supply
 and demand was only likely to be established by a somewhat higher price.''
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