Matteo Spaggiari
π’πˆπ‹π•π„π‘ 𝐂𝐑𝐀𝐒𝐇𝐄𝐃. 𝐓𝐇𝐀𝐓 πƒπŽπ„π’πβ€™π“ πŒπ€πŠπ„ πˆπ“ 𝐀 𝐁𝐀𝐃 πˆππ•π„π’π“πŒπ„ππ“. β€œBe fearful when others are greedy, and greedy when others are fearful.” β€” Warren Buffett Here’s the part most people miss. Silver isn’t just a shiny metal people speculate on. It’s a working material. No silver means: no solar panels no efficient electronics no advanced batteries no medical instruments no high-performance semiconductors Silver has the highest electrical conductivity of all metals. There’s no real substitute at scale. When it’s used, it’s often not recoverable. That matters. Unlike gold, most silver is consumed, not stored. It disappears into products. Gone from the market. At the same time: industrial demand keeps rising green energy uses more silver every year supply growth is slow and constrained So why does silver crash? Because in the short term, price isn’t driven by factories. It’s driven by leveraged traders, ETFs, and emotion. That’s the paradox: short-term price = fear and greed long-term value = physics and industry When silver falls hard, it’s usually not because demand vanished. It’s because weak hands were forced out. Buffett’s quote fits perfectly here. Most people feel comfortable owning silver after it doubled. They feel uncomfortable after it corrected. Same metal. Same use. Different psychology. Silver rewards patience. It punishes impatience. And volatility isn’t a flaw. It’s the price paid by those who want long-term exposure to something the real economy actually needs.
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