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To: statesidereport who wrote (127263)12/6/2013 8:58:27 AM
From: Rocket Red  Respond to of 233843
 
Yup all factored in already



To: statesidereport who wrote (127263)12/6/2013 9:14:48 AM
From: Goose94  Respond to of 233843
 
U.S. need weak U.S. dollar to pay back all that debt accumulated the last 5 years.



To: statesidereport who wrote (127263)12/6/2013 11:08:07 AM
From: Goose94  Respond to of 233843
 
U.S. Employment Data May Boost Silver Prices

The week began promisingly enough, with silver sitting at $19.76 per ounce, up from last week’s low of $19.54, early Monday morning. However, by the end of the day, “favorable US scheduled data” had pushed the precious metal to $19.21, as per Capital Trading Group. Also undermining the precious metal were “adverse currency market action” and “noted weakness in platinum and copper prices.”

Tuesday was a fairly steady day for silver, which traded between $19.36 and $19.07. However, the next day, it took another plunge, heading below $19 to hit $18.93. In another report, Capital Trading Group said that the white metal seemed to have followed gold downward, giving “gold price action more” clout than “its own potentially supportive internal fundamental factors.”

Since then, silver has managed to pick itself back up a little. After hitting a low of $19.36 this morning, it closed the day at $19.44.

Encouragingly, Standard Bank said earlier this week that prices may see some improvement tomorrow, after the US Bureau of Labor Statistics releases the country’s official November employment data.



To: statesidereport who wrote (127263)12/6/2013 12:15:05 PM
From: NOW  Respond to of 233843
 
only think is payroll is bogus; all gains were fed employees returning to work