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/biz/ - Business & Finance


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File: 327 KB, 1600x1200, Coal, Alaskan anthracite, over 1 pound weight.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58282984 No.58282984 [Reply] [Original]

Everything's bigger in Alaska edition, even the anthracite coal

Commodities include
>Precious metals
Platinum, Gold, Silver
>Energy
Oil, Natural Gas, Uranium, Coal
>Base Metals
Copper, Nickel, Zinc
>Others
Water, Agricultural, Salt

More information for each commodity
https://pastebin.com/tduUv8Ny
Calculators for DD
https://pastebin.com/TsRtpKHs
Steer Clear List
https://pastebin.com/V571vwse
News Sources
https://pastebin.com/bQFESpBL

Youtube channels to follow
>Mining Specific
Kitco Mining, Crescat Capital, Mining Stocks Education, Crux Investor, Metals Investor Forum, Resource Talks, Vancouver Resource Investment Conference, Rule Investment Media, Hedgeless Horseman
>Market Commentary
Peter Schiff, Liberty and Finance, Finding Value Finance, Commodity Culture, Palisade Gold Radio, Sprott Money, Rob Kientz, Mike Maloney, Macro Voices, Decouple Podcast, Saxo Market Call
>Twitter Pages for Mining News
JrMiningNetwork, JuniorMiningHub, KitcoMining, MinerDeck, MiningVisuals, Mining

>What is Austrian economics?
https://mises.org/what-austrian-economics
>What has government done to our money? - Murray Rothbard
https://mises.org/library/what-has-government-done-our-money
>The mystery of banking - Murray Rothbard
https://mises.org/library/mystery-banking
>Profit & Loss - Ludwig Von Mises
https://mises.org/library/profit-and-loss-0
>Must Read: Gary Allen, "Hunt for Silver"
https://s3.amazonaws.com/camppictures/CampArchive/Economy/Hunt%20For%20Silver.pdf
>How to play the exploration stock
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DxxZOA403dY

Previous: >>58242128

>> No.58283013
File: 136 KB, 563x832, 1669557961673068.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58283013

WAGMI

>> No.58283021
File: 352 KB, 1600x1200, Coal, Alaskan anthracite, over 1 pound weight #2.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58283021

>>58283013
Yes we will
Amen!

>> No.58283034
File: 187 KB, 1511x2015, 1712173023556710.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58283034

>>58283021
Based

>> No.58283098
File: 646 KB, 2048x2048, EWTdY95XgAAzVcD.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58283098

Who's getting on board?

>> No.58283110
File: 500 KB, 1280x956, 1628188762602.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58283110

>>58283098
Also graeme said his plane is going to have a layover in Japan before he heads to Thailand if anyone is curious.

>> No.58283193
File: 460 KB, 720x978, Screenshot_20240403_163635_X.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58283193

>> No.58283252
File: 326 KB, 720x1249, Screenshot_20240403_164709_X.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58283252

Umm based department?

>> No.58283258

>>58283252
the vindicated Schiff dabbing will be legendary

>> No.58283266

is aurcana still the hot stock to load up on? bayhorse?

>> No.58283292

>>58283266
>aurcana
For the love of God, do not but this.

>> No.58283329

was there a new jobs report or some shit what happened today why are all my mining stocks up 15%?

>> No.58283337

>>58283329
If those miners close the divergence between them and gold... holy moly!

>> No.58283340
File: 10 KB, 400x400, Peabody logo.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58283340

About that continuous miners I found for Peabody, he will have to relocate a few states over for his new job, but will get great pay and bonuses. His main regret is leaving his wife and young children behind while he gets set up in a new state. They will follow in due time, but he'll be without them for a while and of course he loves his new family very much.

So as a piece of advice to the young whippersnappers here: being a man is hard. There are a lot of tough decisions you have to make, a lot of big choices that will affect the future lives of not only yourself, but of those nearest and dearest to you. Be ready for it -- man up and take the responsibility and do the best you can. No one gets through life unscarred, especially a man. Wear your scars with pride, as the anon said in the previous thread.

>> No.58283349
File: 1.32 MB, 809x573, Coal continuous miner.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58283349

>>58283340
*About that continuous miner operator that I found for Peabody

>> No.58283379
File: 967 KB, 947x998, lol .png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58283379

*wheezing*

>> No.58283382
File: 1.37 MB, 4048x3036, Big Boy 4014.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58283382

>>58283340
I only mention this because I just had a half hour phone conversation with him -- he is the son in law of a friend of mine -- about his goals, his family, his life, his concerns. He's a great guy and I am glad to help him out. But remember: being a man is hard, but never lose your humanity throughout all the trials and hardships.

>> No.58283443

>>58283266
the absolute state of /cmmg/...

>> No.58283556

>>58283443
what about impact silver? could they be the next basedhorse?

>> No.58283572

>>58283556
jesus....

>> No.58283598

>>58283258
I hope his red lights keep him alive long enough to dunk on the entirety of the financial media.

>> No.58283646
File: 357 KB, 2048x1152, 435350186_1036054094697634_8924688151427473978_n.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58283646

>>58283266
Nope.
Get on Benton Resources

https://www.bentonresources.ca/benton-drilling-expands-great-burnt-copper-deposit-arranges-3-million-private-placement/

>> No.58283720

>>58283572
okay warren buffet, what's good?

>> No.58283724

>>58283098
In the previous threads there were a number posts that confirm Bayhorse never had a mining permit, even though Graeme did many interviews and Bayhorse made statements on their website they were mining, and had been mining for years. Sounds like a fraud to me. Can any of the suckers, I mean share holders sue Bayhorse and Graeme for such fraud?

>> No.58283862

>>58283720
bayhorse ;)

>> No.58283874

Can someone hazard a guess as to why my Appia Energy stocks are barely moving even though Uranium is up?

>> No.58283966

>>58283874
The market thinks you're gay.

>> No.58284037

>>58283266
>aurcana
Now that's a name I've not heard in a long time... *sips*

>> No.58284166
File: 50 KB, 512x384, Coal miner 2.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58284166

Good news for Utah thermal coal miners!

https://www.yahoo.com/news/rocky-mountain-power-now-plans-041000864.html

Coal-fired power plants expected to operate until 2042 (and by that time, coal should be back in style).

>> No.58284188

>>58284166
>While Jack acknowledged that Rocky Mountain Power plans to phase out coal by 2050, he said that the resource replacing it — whether it’s nuclear or something else — needs to be up and running before Utah ditches its coal plants, which have been dependable for decades.

Indeed, only gas and nuclear can match coal's reliability, though gas is subject to much worse price swings and is dependent on just in time delivery. A coal power plant can store weeks or months of extra coal nearby in case of a shortage.
Nuclear costs an arm and a leg to get running under today's regulatory regime, and each new nuclear plant takes at least a decade to build.

>> No.58284196
File: 44 KB, 499x385, D1octGLWoAIJ-oL.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58284196

>>58283556
>Mexico

>> No.58284339
File: 729 KB, 2448x2217, IMG_20240403_204029.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58284339

Comfy SUV anon checking in.

>> No.58284411

>>58283329
>>58283329
>>58283329
>>58283329
>>58283329
so ive been googling news today and still cant find a reason for the pump what happened? nobody?

>> No.58284458

>>58284411
5 point clue: look at the metal prices

>> No.58284526
File: 16 KB, 474x327, Coal miner.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58284526

Cumberland Mine, now owned by Iron Synergy, has been a staple of Greene County, Pennsylvania, where I have a good family friend with whom I stay when in the area. It is indefinitely closed. United Mine Workers of America president Cecil Roberts says the closure is permanent, while Iron Synergy says its due to elevated methane levels and the closure of the port in Baltimore, which are temporary.
This is bad news for Appalachian coal mining.

>The Friday release said that workers will be called back to work “when Iron determines that the Cumberland Mine can be operated safely and compliantly and when sufficient modes of transportation are made available by Iron’s customers to reduce inventory levels and justify the recommencement of mining activities.”

>Iron said that the need for its mine continuing operation is even more important following the Francis Scott Key Bridge collapse, which closed the Port of Baltimore.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/markets/cumberland-coal-mine-in-southern-pennsylvania-is-closing/ar-BB1kHFch

>> No.58284565
File: 178 KB, 1280x720, Coal mine, low coal.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58284565

>>58284526
The UMWA might just need to go. I believe in rights and good pay and protections for workers, especially highly skilled workers (who've always had labor organizations, going back to ancient and medieval guilds), but the union mines just don't seem to be faring well these days, at least in coal. Gas pipeliners are unionized and doing well, but that's because gas is taking coal's market share. Oil workers are unionized, largely, and doing well too, but they're not under assault like coal miners are.
I was talking with a friend in Colorado and he was saying it's probably inevitable that western U.S. mines go heavily Hispanic in the near future, so I should be learning Spanish, which I will.
The days of coal miners making 100k+ per year may be ending. It might be back to how it was in the 1920s, maybe equivalent to a 50k per year job in the future.
It's sad, but the green fucks and the natural gas subsidies have driven coal mining to this point. The only way to save coal may be to make it a lowly profession once again.
Giving this news would get me absolutely roasted by any audience of American coal miners, but soon it might be obvious that they need to hear it and then decide their futures accordingly.

>> No.58284585
File: 115 KB, 648x350, Coal longwall.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58284585

>>58284565
So far this year has seen a wipeout in Appalachian coal. They aren't doing good. There are hiring freezes all over northern Appalachia (which means northern WV and southwestern PA). Some Illinois Basin mines are also on hiring freezes after Sunrise Coal's layoffs -- 100+ miners have fled Sunrise even after the layoffs.
Natural gas prices need to rise or this will be a very dark year for thermal coal. Even met coal isn't doing so hot.

>> No.58284596
File: 511 KB, 1468x2048, Oliver Wizard.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58284596

>>58283556
nice bait anon, have a (you)

>>58283034
perfection...

>>58283720
lurk more faggot.

Time for another day of big gains brothers. Another 25% up and my PF is finally green from when I started investing at the top in summer 2020.

>> No.58284640

>>58284596
happy for you fren, I was there too. Learned mining stock fu with the others on /pmg/ and later /cmmg/, fell into pitfalls and learned to think with my own head. We've seen the worst and now it's time for some good times

>> No.58284675
File: 156 KB, 411x600, 1637852656548.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58284675

>>58282984
School day's over come on then John,
time to be getting your pit boots on,
On with your sark and moleskin trousers,
Time you were on your way,
Time you were learning the pit man's job,
And earning the pit man's pay.

Come on then Jim it's time to go,
Time you were working down below
Time to be handling a pick and shovel,
You start at the pits today,
Time you were learning the collier's job,
And earning the colliers pay.

Come on then Dai, it's almost light,
Time you were off to the anthracite,
The morning mist is on the vally,
It's time you were on your way,
Time you were learning the miners job
And earning the miners pay

>> No.58284679
File: 269 KB, 1200x800, Coal mine 1.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58284679

>>58284640
>We've seen the worst and now it's time for some good times
Indeed. I am even optimistic for coal in the U.S. despite these hard times.
Coal just needs to climb the hump, i.e. survive this decade, which is the hump. It's the fiery era of green activism but which is fizzling out slowly. Whatever coal-fired plants remain, I think, by 2030 will be allowed to operate indefinitely because, I believe, they will be seen as necessary infrastructure.
Already the UK is reinvesting in its coal sector, albeit with baby steps. People will see the writing on the wall -- Europe will see it first, since their energy situation is fucked, but the USA will get there -- and people will realize we need coal in our fuel mixture.
So if we can get through this dark night of coal, we can live to see a new dawn.

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-203041/Coal-mines-52m-government-cash.html

>> No.58284731

>>58284679
Coal will easily survive many decades yet. It would be great if the phaseout/transition meme could die soon though. I don't think it's in the people's best interests to get rid of conventional fuels

>> No.58284754

>>58283966
checked

>> No.58284766
File: 880 KB, 630x945, French castle.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58284766

>>58284731
Globally, coal is setting new production records every year, with 8.5 billion tons mined in 2023. The issue I'm worried about is coal mining in the United States. Coal is on the ropes here.
We gotta fight back against the greens and argue for new coal-power generation to be built, which is a hard sell in the current environment given that the public is just beginning to realize renewable energy isn't going to be enough. So I expect it will be a while still before we can have the conversation about revitalizing and expanding the USA's fleet of coal-fired generating stations.
In the meantime, I hope we can export more to emerging markets, particularly Asia, but Europe too has been a decent buyer of American coal recently. The mine I am going to in Colorado exports mostly to Europe because its coal is so clean that it meets Europe's stringent emissions standards.

>> No.58284817

>>58283252
Lmao

>> No.58285396

>>58284458
yes but WHY nobody has explained to me what the newsworthy catalyst was

>> No.58285407
File: 24 KB, 153x337, Capture.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58285407

>PM are starting a breakout
>all my junior are already deep green
Like most here, I'm going to make a killing on this leg-up. We'll be insanely rewarded for holding on brothers.

>> No.58285415
File: 45 KB, 259x258, 1695409203895354.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58285415

>>58285396
>what the newsworthy catalyst was
Brother, there is no need for a catalyst. For something to go up, you just need all seller to have nothing to sell anymore, thats what a bottom is. We've been going down for 3 years in yet the most bullish scenario ever.

People trying to time the market always get the rope.

>> No.58285449
File: 86 KB, 924x568, DDA40X.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58285449

>In 2020, China made up a staggering 35% of global gross manufacturing production. That is more than the combined output of the United States (12%), Japan (6%), Germany (4%), India (3%), South Korea (3%), Italy (2%), France (2%), and the United Kingdom.

https://mronline.org/2024/02/05/china-is-worlds-sole-manufacturing-superpower-with-35-of-global-output/

Resources, manufactures, and skills are real wealth. What the West has is hallucinated financial wealth. This fiction won't last, but it won't crash in a day either, because it's useful to too many parties, for the time being.
Get into real wealth: goods, minerals, skills, precious metals.

>> No.58285454
File: 31 KB, 474x315, Coal longwall system.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58285454

>>58285449
The US military backs up its fictional financial wealth.
>The U.S. is the world’s sole military superpower. It spends more on its military than the ten next highest spending countries combined. China is now the world’s sole manufacturing superpower. Its production exceeds that of the nine next largest manufacturers combined.

>> No.58285476
File: 40 KB, 629x353, Manufacturing by country.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58285476

>China’s industrialisation is unprecedented. The last time the ‘king of the manufacturing hill’ got knocked off the throne was when the U.S. surpassed the UK just before WW1. It took the U.S. the better part of a century to rise to the top; the China-US switch took about 15 or 20 years. China’s industrialisation, in short, defies comparison.

>> No.58285509

>tfw no mining stocks
>tfw all I have is WMT and some shit etfs
Feels batman

>> No.58285515

>>58285476
RoW chads we are killing it

>> No.58285537

>>58285509
https://twitter.com/garysavage1/status/1775552093358874992
We might get a pullback soon, a good chance to load.

>> No.58285579

>>58285537
Yeah, fair. What's the play? PMs? Industrials like copper? Other resources?

>> No.58285633
File: 139 KB, 720x960, Coal, rainbow anthracite.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58285633

>>58285476
>China’s industrialisation is unprecedented. The last time the ‘king of the manufacturing hill’ got knocked off the throne was when the U.S. surpassed the UK just before WW1. It took the U.S. the better part of a century to rise to the top; the China-US switch took about 15 or 20 years. China’s industrialisation, in short, defies comparison.
China's incredibly fast rise, doing in 20 years what it took America 100 years to do (eclipse the top manufacturing power in the world), is owed mainly to US offshoring. We simply gave China the title; they barely had to compete for it.
This is why I vote "No Confidence" in our elites. They are short-sighted money grubbers. This is also why I work for a privately held firm, not a publicly traded one; I don't want my company to be beholden to the next quarterly report. I want long term thinking and strategic growth, which my company offers. I am now even getting in the ear of the CEO; he has read a couple of my emails to him and has responded saying he likes what he read and likes my ideas for Asian expansion.
We may be the first U.S. coal mining company to go to Asia. Why? Because we have a leadership with balls. They aren't beholden to shareholders and aren't living in fear of lawsuits in case they fail to do "due diligence." They can take chances because they are risking their own family fortune.

>> No.58285680
File: 46 KB, 541x506, 1664327303174103.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58285680

>>58285579
I'm in Gold, Silver and Copper. I dont see the need, in my case, to dip my toe into other commodity. To each their own.

>> No.58286067
File: 1.26 MB, 1200x1036, 1630675733392.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58286067

>>58284596
>Another 25% up and my PF is finally green from when I started investing at the top in summer 2020.
>>58284640
>Learned mining stock fu with the others on /pmg/ and later /cmmg/, fell into pitfalls and learned to think with my own head. We've seen the worst and now it's time for some good times
my long lost twin bros, it's been an almost 4 year journey but we can finally see wagmi ahead

>> No.58286184
File: 2.68 MB, 798x1654, coal.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58286184

harvested this coal the other day. loads more to get...

>> No.58286236

>>58286184
nice coals

>> No.58286262
File: 653 KB, 2000x1125, Pepe low coal.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58286262

>>58286184
Very, very fine!
Where did they come from?

>> No.58286309

>>58283252
is schiff just trolling at this point lmao

>> No.58286369
File: 2.75 MB, 4032x3024, sea coal.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58286369

>>58286236
>>58286262
got em off the beach! it was a nice day out and decided to take a walk

>> No.58286379
File: 1.03 MB, 2664x2401, Coal Mine longwall.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58286379

>>58286369
What beach is that where you just go and find coal?

>> No.58286400

>>58286379
Bishop's Beach, Homer, Alaska
It's bituminous sea coal. There's a whole load of it here. Used to be coal mines and coal will fall out of the cliffs and/or wash up from the ocean floor. It gets deposited on the beaches here after storms. Hell a couple miles over the water is called Coal Bay

>> No.58286410

>>58286400
I need to vacation on that beach.

>> No.58286417

>>58286410
It's real nice here yeah. Moved here six months ago. Honestly still quite a bit of people— not fully remote. Getting free coal on the beach is just a nice plus :)
you come visit anon and I'll show you where to find the coal.

Here's an excerpt from wikipedia:
>Coal was discovered in the area in the 1890s. The Cook Inlet Coal Fields Company built a town, dock, coal mine, and railroad at Homer. Coalmining in the area continued until World War II. It is estimated that 400 million tons of coal deposits are still present in the area.
>400 million tons

>> No.58286432
File: 176 KB, 1000x750, Coal mine continuous miner.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58286432

>>58286417
If an underground coal mine were set up in Homer, AK, I'd be there in a jiffy.
I may get around to seeing that someday.

>> No.58286543

>>58286432
Maybe you could open one anon. Sounds good

>> No.58286548

>>58283724
For almost all of us suckers, the legal fees would make it more expensive than it's worth.

>> No.58286567

>>58284565
This will take several decades, but it is inevitable that we get to a point where we NEED coal to keep the grid running and the expertise to mine it will by then be very rare and valuable. The way these environmentalists and climate hoaxers insist on sailing into the typhoon though it will probably have to come to the point where people are at risk of starving and we're killing politicians and reporters before this happens though.

>> No.58286674

>>58286543
I'm a hundred million dollars short.

>> No.58286681

Copper bros?

>> No.58286871

>>58286674
right but I don't think anyone will go through the effort of opening a mine here

>> No.58287566

>>58283646
>private placement
>good news

>> No.58287739

>>58287566
idk about Benton's but private placements can be good news, usually they're awful though

>> No.58288263

>>58287739
>private placements can be good news
Nevada King is a recent example, a lot of insiders participated in the PP and the stock gapped up ~50% once they announced it.

>> No.58288277

>>58286681
Sorry can't answer now. I'm too busy buying.

>> No.58288373
File: 294 KB, 1079x1652, 1707257798233135.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58288373

>Silver miner that hasn't drilled the property up 100% this week.
>My juniors with high grade tonnage in the ground crabbing the whole week.
I love this sector.

>> No.58288458
File: 23 KB, 999x317, Capture.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58288458

Finally green ytd. Jr Explorer are so fucking brutal, no one will be allowed to tell me I was lucky getting rich. Especially after 3 years of crabbing.

>> No.58288469

>>58288458
Nice.

>> No.58288473

>>58288373
sometimes the unnswered questions are worth much more than the answers that are already available, in the markets at least. Speculation can get way ahead of reality but reality wins in the end.

>> No.58288624
File: 18 KB, 363x325, Capture.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58288624

>In 2013, Impact Silver Corp. completed a detailed compilation of existing data, followed by a field program which consisted of geological mapping and prospecting which identified a total of twenty-one (21) silver-bearing veins with substantial widths on the Property. A collection of a total of 395 rock samples with high silver values grading over one (1) kilogram per tonne silver occur in three samples (1,430, 1,230, 1,100 g/t), 18 samples between 500 and 900 g/t silver and 92 samples between 100 and 499 gr/t silver, most of which come from the twenty-one (21) veins thus far identified.
Doubled down in the 5c, easiest double in my life. I'll laugh all the way to the bank if we sniff the 100m market cap.

>> No.58288658

>>58288624
I don't touch shitcos like these with a twenty foot pole but I'm happy for you and I hope you make fabulous gains

>> No.58288678
File: 231 KB, 524x541, 1392568715198.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58288678

>>58288658
Yeah its the only real lottery ticket in my portfolio. The other one being Summa silver but i'll sell that shit the moment we get around 32-35 on futures.

I'm done with shitco, I prefer a steady upleg with good management.

>> No.58288725

>>58288678
If there's one thing I learned during my short investing career (starting from the top of the 2020-2021 bullrun and all the way down till just recently) it's that I actually much prefer lower risk bets to leveraged shitcos that have very little chance of creating any value in a bear market. I like me a cheap major or developer, but I also like explorers if the price is right relative to the risk. And if the management is shit at raising cash then get the fuck out of my sight. Much more stress free for me and better likelihood of making money desu, even if it means leaving some insane gains on the table sometimes

>> No.58288745
File: 210 KB, 640x480, vlcsnap-2022-09-07-23h55m34s349.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58288745

>>58288725
Completely agree. I'm only being agressive right now since the capital is pretty low, thats a mindset to have with a mid 6 figure portfolio. I won't leave this commie shithole by investing in major, unfortunately.

>> No.58288778

Abrasilver hitting a 3-year resistance level, let’s see if she breaks upwards

>> No.58288800

>>58288745
We're not far away from getting into six figs fren. I'm pretty much halfway there, and maybe 80-90% there if I sell my apartment.

>> No.58288810

>>58288778
You love to see it. Fireweed Zi- I mean Fireweed Metals is also forming a nice boner, they have some nice silver grades on top of all the zinc

>> No.58288817
File: 46 KB, 583x410, image2.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58288817

>>58288800
Yeah, but if take into account the 30% sale taxe, I need almost a double. Its fine, confident we'll make a tons.

>> No.58288825

>>58288469

>> No.58288844 [DELETED] 
File: 3.88 MB, 1278x718, japan.webm [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58288844

bros, my silver shitcos are up again today, is it really happening?

>> No.58288865

>>58288844
Yes. This is the Big One™

>> No.58289401

Should I spend my cash now I haven't bought a miner in 2 years I am totally out of the loop

>> No.58289469
File: 1.96 MB, 500x341, 1517278786890.gif [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58289469

>>58289401
>always chasing green dildo
ngmi.

>> No.58289666

>>58282984
What's a good bullish play on oil right now? I'm really expecting to see some high oil prices come summer, certainly into election season.

>> No.58289776

>AEM down
>NEM up
The cartel is winning.

>> No.58289847
File: 36 KB, 599x540, BHS.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58289847

>>58283098
>>58283110
How do you learn to be as good a CEO as Graeme?

>> No.58289910

>>58289666
checked, can't go wrong with the big high quality guys like Exxon. Sunshine or rain these guys make money.

>> No.58290566

>>58289847
How does one go about making one of these lifestyle companies?

>> No.58290607
File: 377 KB, 584x835, 1695890835724311.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58290607

>>58283098
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/bayhorse-silver-corporate-132900986.html

>(three wise men so to speak)
>I'm just billy goating in the hills
>relatively straightforward "reopen a high grade silver mine" process."

I'm done, they started shitposting on their NR

>> No.58290729

>>58290607
unbelievable

>> No.58290742
File: 1.97 MB, 640x359, cmmg ball kick.webm [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58290742

WTF is going on today? When gold/silver were down early my stonks were way up, now that gold/silver came back and are green my stonks are red

>> No.58290774

>>58290742
normal market functions. Profit taking and consolidation etc just take it easy and let the market do its thing. We're in buy the fucking dip mode right now.

>> No.58291016

>>58290774
Depends on Powell. I called him changing course a year and a half ago and I was dead wrong that little nigga didn't even flinch when the yield curve inverted!
So we may have one more buying opportunity where we're back in the $25-26 range during the early summer

But don't listen to me, I've been wrong way more than I've been right

>> No.58291063

>>58291016
I don't think Powell's policy decisions or rhetoric matters. Gold is going up due to foreign central bank buying.

>> No.58291095

>>58290742
Everything is still green with me

>> No.58291128

>>58291063
Oh really? Did anybody say anything itt? Did we cover it? I've been dealing with some serious medical stuff and my mind isn't all there due to a traumatic brain injury. I've been reading the archives to help get me back on track, but I miss a lot. Like a lot

>> No.58291156
File: 168 KB, 900x500, Coal mine continuous mining.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58291156

>>58286567
>This will take several decades, but it is inevitable that we get to a point where we NEED coal to keep the grid running and the expertise to mine it will by then be very rare and valuable.
Yep, and when we get to that point, it'll take a full generation for the few people left who have these skills to train a new workforce.

>> No.58291397

>>58289776
kek

>> No.58291447

>>58291128
get well
you havent missed anything, just lurk in the comming weeks and you will be updated on things
no need to read archives except you are looking for special information

>> No.58291466

>>58291128
I mean gold and silver could pull back and consolidate for a bit I agree, but I don't think what the Fed does really matters for the overall bull market trend.

Best wishes and prayers, I hope you can recover from your injuries

>> No.58292076
File: 55 KB, 724x723, 1703228501191901.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58292076

>BREAKING: UAE ANNOUNCE THE SUSPENSION OF ALL DIPLOMATIC TIES WITH ISRAEL.

>> No.58292170

>>58292076
Thank God!
Allahu Akbar!

>> No.58292521

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/president-biden-just-canceled-plans-193000901.html

Lol
LMAO even

>> No.58292658
File: 19 KB, 350x357, 1705082797474508.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58292658

>>58292076
Cmon, same old same old. Can't they come up with something new instead of pulling this 1970s card.

>> No.58292706

>>58292658
This is extremely good news. Anon, are you here to make money or not? We know their playbook.
We know we'll hit ridiculous inflation as energy shits upward. Everyone is happily predicting 3-4 rate cuts and I told anyone who would listen to not entirely forget rates could still increase, too.
Yield curve is still fucked. Just trade the sectors and you'll make bank. Be patient

>> No.58292722

>>58292706
>This is extremely good news.
I'm like 60% OIL and GAS I know I'll make money on it regardless of this news. But these schemes they're pulling on the average goy piss me off a tad.

>> No.58292797
File: 125 KB, 1024x687, Coal Miners at the Virginia-Pocahontas Coal Company Mine in 1974 waiting to go to work on the 4 pm to midnight shift.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58292797

>>58286567
Or, foreign experts could be hired at that time, for a premium, like from Australia (if they're still mining coal), Russia, China, India, Indonesia. They could teach future Americans coal mining skills again, if these skills mostly die out in the United States.
Already the quality of coal miners, from knowledgeable people I've talked with who've seen the industry over the decades, has declined quite a bit due to lack of old fashion mentoring. It used to be that a new miner would be trained in an experienced crew until he gained all the skills he needs for a certain task or variety of tasks. Now, new miners are often just thrown into the mix to sink or swim.

>> No.58292844
File: 650 KB, 1920x1440, 19.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58292844

>>58292797
For all the flak boomers get, I've found them to be very knowledgeable miners. They were trained back when companies still prioritized training. Now it's just learn while you go.

>> No.58292886

>>58292722
That's fair enough, you're a good person.
Most people are saddled with debt and are habitual spenders, or do things "by the book" (go to college, take a 25 year mortgage, get a wife and kids). Unfortunately, this is largely unsustainable and the general population cannot afford to go several weeks or months without employment. If such an event does happen, they get fucked and continue to be heemed.

Good that you're in a safe position. You cannot help others until you yourself are in a good spot. From here, just keep building your wealth and help others you care about

>> No.58292907
File: 276 KB, 1200x900, 1975 Lincoln Continental Town Car.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58292907

>>58292844
That car is a 1975 Lincoln Continental Coupe (not sure if it's the Continental Town Car/Coupe package, which is the highest end version they made). It's over 19 feet long and weighs about 5,500 pounds. It's a beast and, even though emissions standards weakened engines in that era, it's 460 cubic inch Ford V8 could still pull like a freight train. I so want one of these, particularly the Town Car or Town Coupe. These suckers were string and lasted a long time with proper maintenance. This is back when American cars had their own style: land yachts, giant floating couches. That's the feel of an old American luxury car.
Road feel is German Autobahn sports car style. American style was the comfy couch that just floats down the endless highway in a luxury ride -- befitting out country's huge size and highway system. Who wants to take a 1000 mile drive and get "road feel"? I don't.
We need to bring the American spirit back to automaking and revive the land yacht. Stop aping the European automakers. Their vehicles are designed for their conditions. We in America have our own geographical character.

>> No.58292925

>>58292886
>You cannot help others until you yourself are in a good spot. From here, just keep building your wealth and help others you care about
Exactly what I'm doing. But yeah man I just really dislike fractional reserve banking even though I profit from it, the consequences on society aren't worth it imo. Not much I can do about that at the present time, either way It's impossible to get of the fractional reserve train without a great depression and/or a gradual devaluation of the currency to Its intrinsic value of 0.

>> No.58293001
File: 106 KB, 639x374, Coal mine ram car.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58293001

>>58292925
I have mixed feelings on fractional reserve banking. This system does indeed help to capitalize businesses and get new ventures going, so it does a lot of good. To me, the devil is in the details. What's the reserve ratio? How much interest are people being charged on loans?
I don't know what the exact figures should be, but I think fractional reserve banking is needed for society to progress, but usury is what is detrimental in terms of its societal consequences.
The Gold Middle, as Aristotle taught

>> No.58293013
File: 27 KB, 474x316, Coal miners, Russia.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58293013

>>58293001
*Golden Middle

>> No.58293041
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58293041

Ok I'm napping. It's over

>> No.58293082

>>58293001
Fractional reserve banking is fine but only when the banks are kept on a short leash by regulators. To begin with banks should always maintain strong reserves and invest (loan) as prudently as possible. Banks don't crash when they're properly run but greed and incompetence runs rampant in the sector

>> No.58293116

>>58293001
I beg to differ. The keynsians say that the fractional reserve banking system provides more accessible capital and promotes innovation, but the reality is that you end up with all these zombie companies that are wasting capital and live of cheap credit at the expense of savers. The reserve ratio is always lowered so that the banks could profit more and because the system requires more and more credit to sustain itself. Interest rates are manipulated creating business cycles with booms and busts which is not good for the average person. Not to mention inflation pushing the costs of living higher for the average person while their salary doesn't keep up with it, so people end up being "forced" into debt slavery. The boom and bust cycle and debt creates all sorts of stress for the average person. People used to work at one place their whole lives, but with the business cycle that's close to impossible. I mean I can go on about this for ages. A full reserve banking system is superior, only businesses and ventures that are worth it get funding, there's deflation, interest rates are stable, jobs are stable, they aren't "forced" into debt slavery, cost of living is going down gradually, the average person can save without devaluation, less strain on the psyche, people can plan for the future etc...

>> No.58293159
File: 15 KB, 376x278, Coal, bituminous.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58293159

>EVA found that, “Once again, the coal power fleet was a principal source of increased power generation to meet demand during the January 2024 winter storm.” And the authors – rightfully – presented that finding with an ominous word of caution: “However, another 98 GW of coal-fired generation capacity, or more than half of the currently operational coal fleet, is announced to retire by 2035.”

By 2035, half the coal-fired power fleet in the US is set to be retired. Very sad and very bad news. If we, like Australia, don't want to use coal for our own energy, let's at least help our trade balance by exporting thermal coal.

https://www.countoncoal.org/2024/02/during-bitter-cold-coal-comes-to-the-rescue-again/

>> No.58293197
File: 126 KB, 600x450, Florence, Italy.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58293197

>>58293082
>To begin with banks should always maintain strong reserves and invest (loan) as prudently as possible. Banks don't crash when they're properly run but greed and incompetence runs rampant in the sector
Totally agree!
A strong banking system is of utmost importance to modern civilization. This means using the banking breakthroughs pioneered in the Italian Renaissance, like fractional reserve banking, but using it well. Both a lack of fractional reserve banking, and its abuse for mere speculative investment, is detrimental to civilization.

>> No.58293225
File: 1.16 MB, 731x1024, Coal, anthracite.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58293225

>>58293116
>A full reserve banking system is superior, only businesses and ventures that are worth it get funding, there's deflation, interest rates are stable, jobs are stable, they aren't "forced" into debt slavery, cost of living is going down gradually, the average person can save without devaluation, less strain on the psyche, people can plan for the future etc...
I'll have to ponder this. I just want what's best for starting new businesses so that the market can thrive, whether that fractional or full reserve banking. I am not sure as of yet.
But if there is fractional reserve banking, then like the other anon said, it needs to be kept on a tight leash so as not to do harm.
I certainly hate our rule by the banks, which is detrimental to the real economy of mining, agriculture, manufacturing, and handy skills.

>> No.58293286
File: 38 KB, 474x314, Egypt.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58293286

>>58293197
On a related note, about government and others institutions and common thieves stealing society's surplus, it is also exactly because we have large-scale societies, i.e. civilizations, that we have so much to tax and steal.
Yes, hunter-gatherer societies have no taxation, but they have no surplus. With surplus comes wealth and protection, and thus the state. So it's like a double edged sword. You can have poverty and no taxation, or a civilization that comes with taxation because civilization always implies a state.
How a stateless civilization could work is beyond my comprehension, but others may be able to enlighten me.
It might even be the case that the bigger the surplus and hence the greater the wealth, the bigger the state will inevitably be.

>> No.58293305

>>58293225
>I just want what's best for starting new businesses so that the market can thrive, whether that fractional or full reserve banking.
I've put a lot of thought (reading too) into this and I've came to various conclusions. Fractional reserve banking isn't good for new small businesses many reasons for why, but one of it would be the boom and bust cycle they create another would be the central bank usually reduces reserve requirements in the busts and reduces interest rates, and the politicians say they'll intervene to "strengthen" the economy and the banks finance the government (because they can create money out of nothing) and the government creates all sorts of laws and regulations that aren't good for business and protect the few at the expense of many. I really mean it when I said it I could go on about this for ages. In the end the bankers own everything because they can create money out of nothing and earn interest from it. You have to ponder these things and you'll see, fractional reserve banking is the work of the devil. It's a curse upon humanity. I'd say with confidence that it retards growth, innovation and degenerates the psyche.

>> No.58293343

>>58293116
this guy knows

>> No.58293434

>>58293286
>How a stateless civilization could work is beyond my comprehension, but others may be able to enlighten me.
I think it could work. USA government spending was ~3% of GDP in the early days, and by that I mean the state wasn't much beyond an army, an archive for claims on property and a intermediary in settling disputes. I know that disputes could be settled locally without state intervention or in private courts (Lex mercatoria), About the army/police, private security companies are gaining more and more ground because of government incompetence to protect it's citizens, so I'd say private security specialist can protect the citizens at least from an inside threat, from outside threats, either the people protect themselves or you have an army run by the state. As for keeping tabs on who owns what I haven't really looked into many examples in history, except for in more primitive/early industrial societies where everyone knew who owned what in the community and they people didn't need archives for it. If the state only had an army a court and an archive for claims on property I'd be ok with it, but that's far from the case.

>> No.58293467
File: 75 KB, 850x400, 1697390107078661.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58293467

>>58293343
Few understand

>> No.58293902

>>58293467
Is what he said supposed to be bad or good? I can kind of agree with his statement. There are too many loafers that the system could do without.

>> No.58293950

>>58293902
if you are a parasite the system was designed for, then its bad. if you are healthy, productive citizen, then its good

all about perspective anon

>> No.58293963

>>58293950
I pretty much agree with Andrew Mellon in that statement. Let's purge society of the worthless.

>> No.58293982

>>58293902
>Is what he said supposed to be bad or good?
Good, and I really like that he mentions these important points "people will live a more moral life" and "values will be adjusted" which are almost always overlooked, because people only see the side effect of fractional reserve banking
on the economy, but not the effects on values, culture, psyche etc...

>> No.58293983

>>58293963
ok but somebody has to adopt bob

>> No.58293988

>>58293305
I would argue booms and busts create opportunities for new businesses to emerge while flushing out the inefficient businesses during crashes. But I also see the harm in the debt cycles and how they're overextended. A lot of people end up suffering when a major crash happens, but ultimately it's up to the individual to try and hold as strong a financial position as possible. I personally avoid having too much leverage and I save a lot, I'm basically shooting myself in the foot as long as debt levels keep racking up but I'm seeing signs that a major deleveraging event could happen within a decade.

>> No.58294019

>>58293902
In the way a forest fire is bad or good.

>> No.58294039
File: 89 KB, 660x574, c27.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58294039

>>58293434
>>How a stateless civilization could work is beyond my comprehension
Welcome to ancapistan, we don't have taxes and rules just insurance premiums and HOAs. If you don't pay the insurance premium to the private military or follow the rule of our city wide HOA we will physically remove you with our private military.

That's what it would devolve into which would be better because people who pay taxes to the society should have more say for how the society works. But whoever you're paying "insurance premiums" to is effectively is the state.

>> No.58294043

>>58293988
>create opportunity for
ten percent for the big guy
>inefficient
taxes, hold the subsidies
>individual try
its illegal to create a competing currency with the us dollar

>> No.58294055

>>58294039
insure yourself

>> No.58294061
File: 153 KB, 954x611, 16435676567898765.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58294061

>>58293988
>I would argue booms and busts create opportunities for new businesses to emerge while flushing out the inefficient businesses during crashes.
Well that isn't the case. The number of zombie companies keeps going up and up, because they never really allow for the system to go though the bust because they banks would fail. The system lives on credit creation, if credit stops being issued the interest and principal cannot be paid back.

>> No.58294073

>>58294055
How?

>> No.58294076

>>58294061
bingo. line go up
has to grow or youre fucked. growth for no other sake...not higher quality products but shittier ones that are made as cheaply and as inefficiently as possible

>> No.58294087

>>58294039
>physically remove you with our private military.
There would be thousands of private security companies, and their services aren't mandatory, you can always protect your life and property yourself. So I don't get the point.

>> No.58294090

>>58294073
stop being poor

>> No.58294100

>>58294076
We're on the same frequency Lassen bro. The ones who truly know the ins and outs of the system are few and far between.

>> No.58294113

>>58294090
Kek. True.

>> No.58294118

>>58294087
>>58294090
All I'm saying is that it'll just become city states within a couple of decades.

>> No.58294136

>>58293983
Who is this Bob who is in need of adoption?

>> No.58294137

>>58294019
that's a rather good analogy.
>>58294039
that is functionally no different from how a typical state operates
>>58294043
Everybody can buy at market bottoms or start a business when everybody else is closing shop. Taxes a shit I agree but until a better system comes around just gotta suck it up. No need to create a new currency, holding gold for savings is good enough and the rest is individual productivity and opportunism at market lows
>>58294061
Key word: deleveraging. The debt cycle ain't going into a down cycle until leverage is reduced. Happens once about every 80 years or something, and in the middle there's 7-8 year long short term debt cycles with longer term increasing credit levels. There comes a point where the system simply gets crushed under the weight of all that credit.

It's not optimal but it does create major opportunities when it happens. And it will destroy many estates.

>> No.58294169

>>58294137
fiat currency is inherently unstable which is not a good thing

>> No.58294187

>>58293988
I agree with the general idea of creative destruction -- that periods of chaos and disorder are needed to take down the weak and usher in a new era of the strong.

>> No.58294195

>>58294039
How would the security apparatus not just turn themselves into the government and rule you by force? You're paying them for protection, after all, like tributes to a king.

>> No.58294197

>>58294169
yep. Lives and dies by credit. A sounder currency system is necessary. Perhaps a commodity basket based currency, maybe a cryptocurrency or something, hell if I know. Otherwise it's back to the same classic debt cycle after this one has crashed. We'll see.

>> No.58294212

>>58294187
I guess it's just another facet of human nature. Maybe we're fated to repeat our mistakes over and over again as a species.

>> No.58294217

>>58294187
that happens without any fiat monetary cycles. we constantly evolve and those who dont will die. now you dont need anything other than powerful friends in dc, products and services are for the peasants to produce

>> No.58294227

>>58294195
That's what I'm saying.

>> No.58294229

>>58294195
ultimately it would come down to people being more self sufficient or back to fifedoms

>> No.58294388

Collapse at a limestone mine in Kansas, what is this going to do to the limestone market?

>> No.58294391

>>58294137
>The debt cycle ain't going into a down cycle until leverage is reduced. Happens once about every 80 years or something,
This cycle is created by fractional reserve banking.

>> No.58294441

>>58294118
Frankly idk what leads to formation of a state, I haven't studied the subject enough, although I'll speculate it has something to do with self-interest, greed and stupidity.

>> No.58294578

>Newmont Completes $20 Million Global Community Support Fund, Partnering with Communities for Greater Resilience Post-Pandemic
Idk why I even hold shares in this company, prolly going to sell them soon.

>> No.58294613

>>58294578
Newmont is probably the worst gold major. They have to start cutting off some fat, selling subpar assets and optimize their mine portfolio to start off. It will take years until Newmont can become a properly run company.

>> No.58294632
File: 83 KB, 419x238, 167865546788765.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58294632

>>58294613
>Newmont can become a properly run company.

>> No.58294658

>>58294632
it's either that or possibly a bankruptcy. They do intend to start selling off their worse assets but yep it looks very bad right now. Never say never, maybe they can correct course during this gold bull market, but I can't invest in their business and sleep my nights well. The 2nd and 3rd biggest, Barrick and Agnico on the other hand are phenomenal businesses

>> No.58294775

>>58294388
Do you have a link?
I used to work in limestone.

>> No.58294919
File: 181 KB, 720x1001, Screenshot_20240404_184747_Brave.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58294919

Japan trip canceled

>> No.58294925

>>58294775
https://fox4kc.com/news/reported-kansas-city-area-earthquake-caused-by-mine-collapse/
I was at this mine just a few months ago myself. It's collapse registered a 3.5 on the Richter

>> No.58295002

>>58294925
Neat stuff. I wonder if they were shooting the floors to get more aggregate. That makes the pillars taller and less stable.

>> No.58295040

>>58294919
that's not a bearish chart

>> No.58295220
File: 51 KB, 499x400, PepeLaugh.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58295220

>>58295040
>taking a one day chart serious

>> No.58295284

>>58295220
it's not a bearish 1d chart

>> No.58296338
File: 50 KB, 456x572, 16549864.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58296338

>>58284596
>Another 25% up and my PF is finally green from when I started investing at the top in summer 2020.
Now need 17%.

>> No.58296705

>Gold
>Copper
>Palladium
>Crude
>Heating Oil
>Nat Gas
>Corn
>Basedbean
>Cocoa
>Coffee
>Live Cattle
>Lean Hog
>EUROSTOX
>DOW
>NIKKEI
>SOFR
>Euro Bond
>US Long Bond
>GBP
>CAD
>AUD
Above is the list of markets traded by "Bowmoor Capital's Global Alpha" fund.
The list of markets seems like it's missing a few things.
>What would you add?

I'm going to trade these myself. I will be using a trend following method like what is described in Robert Carver's books. i.e. the type AHL & Winton use.
>Continuous signals, dynamic position sizing
Starting with just time-series momentum for now, using the below signals, each with multiple lookbacks.
>EWMAC, Normalised Momentum & Breakout from Rob Carver
>Floor-Ceil Regime from Laurent Bernut
>Bollinger, MACD that everyone knows, modified to match to Carver framework.
Not optimising my lookback parameters, but I am optimising my allocated weight to each signal.
I will be using CFDs. The fees are higher than futures, but I don't have the $1MM+ trading capital required to hold a diversified portfolio of futures.

Anyone here trade systematic/algorithmic global macro / commodity?
If so, how does your system compare?

>> No.58297043

>>58296338
>>Another 25% up and my PF is finally green
You forgot to add another 25% for the emotional pain of being a bagholder for multiple years.

>> No.58297226

>>58296705
With commodities the time to bet on a bear market reversal is when most producers are losing money and closing down operations. And when you're trading, keep it simple stupid. That's all the advice I can give as a non-futures degenerate.

>> No.58297296
File: 507 KB, 792x641, 1706033593447397.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58297296

>>58297043
More like 5x.

>> No.58297415

god it feels nice when my muscles are sore from previous days' workouts

>> No.58297832
File: 98 KB, 550x698, 1j02kva-202949_1db7df0744071a10_001.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58297832

>Awalé Resumes Drilling at the Charger Prospect on the Odienné Project Joint Venture
>The new drill program follows up on a recent drill intercept of 26 g/t gold over 57m, including 45.7 g/t gold over 32m.
these guys are already following up on that world class intercept they got about a month ago

>> No.58299160
File: 452 KB, 1200x1600, Coal, rainbow anthracite 2.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58299160

coal lump, coal bump

>> No.58299223

some interesting news for Surge Copper!
https://www.mining.com/african-rainbow-minerals-ups-copper-game-with-surge-stake-buy/

>> No.58299758

>That candle on gold.
Lmao. The cartel is losing.

>> No.58299811

>>58299758
fuck I tried so hard to push the price down today but I just couldn't print those contracts quick enough... Lord Morgan is going to have my head for this!

>> No.58299867
File: 11 KB, 230x264, EVZ09aZXYAIdgq5.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58299867

>>58299758
>they couldnt smash it
A bullmarket change the rules. You just dont get to manipulate down, only up.

>> No.58300113
File: 216 KB, 645x849, 17789764324567.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58300113

>>58299811

>> No.58300233

https://www.ecoticias.com/en/water-engine-first-time/674/

Water engine

>> No.58300655

>>58300233
nice try schlomo oil ain't going down

>> No.58300704

>>58300655
Lol. This is for race applications dumbass
It's a hydrogen engine that uses water injection. The technology is probably a hundred years from trickling down to your car so you can keep driving to the bridge to suck dicks for cigarette money even tho you quit smoking years ago

>> No.58300729

The cartel lost today

>> No.58300761

>>58300729
>NEM up 4%
>AEM up 2.8%
The cartel is still fighting...

>> No.58301043
File: 55 KB, 600x450, Coal mine, Illinois.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58301043

Can we get Peter Schiff to convert to Christianity. I say this because I like him and don't him being a Jew. I do not believe Jews are biologically evil, like their problem is in the genes and there all Jews must go. I believe they can change their ways through a sincere repentance and conversion in the heart.
Peter Schiff, won't you consider the Christian path?

>> No.58301050
File: 39 KB, 947x692, Coal production as of 3-2-2024, USA.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58301050

>>58301043
Buddhism is also an acceptable alternative to if Christianity just doesn't suit Peter.

>> No.58301054

>>58301043
>I like him and don't him being a Jew. I do not believe Jews are biologically evil,
An oxymoron.

>> No.58301165
File: 122 KB, 229x225, irwin-schiff.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58301165

>>58301043
His father did more for America and against the cartel than anyone you'll be able to find in history
His father wrote books from prison against the cartel. He's my hero

>> No.58301167

>>58300704
nope oil isn't going down try again later water shill

>> No.58301188

>>58301054
So you believe Jews are genetically corrupted and therefore all Jews are evil?

>> No.58301200

>>58301167
Yeah I'm the anti oil water shill selling fracking sand and oilfield services

Because that makes perfect sense

>> No.58301229

>>58301043
He's not even religious.
Also kek I remember him running for senate and lying by telling everyone he was christian and went to church lmao

>> No.58301235

Is Trillion Energy just straight up dead?

>> No.58301246

>>58301200
He was holding gasfrac in 2015 and is bitter for it.

>> No.58301254

>>58301188
Checked.
I'm saying if you don't think all Jews are evil, then it would be contradictory to say you dislike Schiff just because he's Jewish.

>> No.58301326

>>58301200
oh shit it's the frac chad
sorry for trolling you man I'm just taking the piss

>> No.58301347

>>58301254
I said I like Schiff. That was a typo
I think Jews can possible be changed through conversion -- a real, sincere conversion in the heart.
Also, shitloads of Europeans have trace amounts of Jewish blood from interbreeding over the past 1000+ years. Are they all intrinsically corrupt? If so, then Europa is hopeless.

>> No.58301384

>>58301347
>I said I like Schiff. That was a typo
Ok mb.

>> No.58301416

>>58301384
No problem
Sure, Schiff is a broken record, but his crusade for precious metals, which goes back decades in his life, is truly admirable. A man of such conviction should be an honorary Aryan.

>> No.58301509

>>58300761
NEM heading to $50 sooner than later, feels comfy as fuck holding some calls. Need GOLD to stop being a faggot and break at least $20, congrats gentlemen the overall macro setup looks too good to be true

>> No.58301525

>>58301509
Everything is going to just keep going up. I think Barrick is beginning to catch up well too. Barrick also has the copper spice on top which should be good longer term

>> No.58301545
File: 48 KB, 426x650, Aryan.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58301545

>>58301416
And not only is Schiff a man of unswerving conviction, he is a man of great fortitude and courage. He has endured decades of criticism, ridicule, and even nasty verbal attacks from his detractors, yet he marches on spreading the good world of gold and silver.
That is honorable and befitting the warrior spirit of Prussia or the Bushido Code.
I hereby declare Peter Schiff an honorary Aryan.

>> No.58301558

>>58301525
Yep, Barrick is a huge gold producer, but they produce a lot of copper too in the Nevada mines. Silver is also found in trace amounts in their mines, but not enough to make a difference in their business.
I wish they'd get a better management team.

>> No.58301576

>>58301545
Test

>> No.58301585
File: 53 KB, 441x600, Coal mine longwall 2.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58301585

>>58301576
You passed, brother

>> No.58301592

>>58301246
Shit that was just before they all mooned they were popping up like dandelions in 2017-18 and anybody with more than a playpen full of sand was making a mint

>> No.58301620
File: 3.71 MB, 4032x2268, 20240405_125022.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58301620

>>58301585
How do we feel about copper

>> No.58301623
File: 61 KB, 814x698, NFG.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58301623

NFG bros getting close to an explosive move up

>> No.58301630

>>58301326
Sorry I've had a rough morning. Woke up covered in sweat because I have some infection that makes me sweat all night long and get zero sleep and the moment I woke up my ostomy bag exploded sending shit all over the bed and then my old lady was yelling thinking I did it on purpose. I wish I died in that car crash so my life would be better to experience now

I'm fucking miserable

>> No.58301638

>>58301558
On the global scale Barrick has an amazing upper management team. Though I understand there are some issues at Nevada apparently

>> No.58301654

>>58301638
Very true
Barrick is a global giant and doing well globally

>> No.58301678

>>58301630
Sounds like you've had a horrible day. But I'll keep praying for your eventual recovery. Never give up! People have been able to recover from the unthinkable, you might also. I don't want to give false hope but you need to strive for improvement, the mental attitude matters a lot for healing.

>> No.58301755

>>58301678
True
I'm in a bad place mentally and if I had ability or access to a gun I would kill myself. I'm weak and I can't live in pain like this.

If anything this bullrun and this thread are my only joy in life now. I love you guys, even the commies like Bob

>> No.58301779

>>58301755
Some wise man once said that a man isn't alive if he doesn't have a dream. Let the make it gains be the dream that keeps you alive fren. You have to be in good health to enjoy the wealth.

>> No.58301789
File: 116 KB, 960x720, Coal, rainbow anthracite 3.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58301789

>>58301630
I am so sorry to hear that, brother. You survived the crash. If you can, draw on all your strength to get through this horrible time. It may take quite a while, and I am sure that with the extent of your injuries you will have some problems for the rest of your life, but there is a decent chance that, in time, you can have an adequate quality of mind.
With your body in shambles, I suggest you focus now on the life of the mind, to the extent you can. Read, think, write, learn. These avenues remain open to you, it seems. Use them.

>> No.58301811

>>58301755
We will keep /cmmg/ alive and, moreover, keep it lively and interesting. It sounds like you have a very strong interest in commodities. I suggest you focus now on the life of the mind, the life of learning and sharing your knowledge. This can be quite fulfilling.

>> No.58301834

>>58301811
>>58301779
Thank you

>> No.58301868

>>58301755
>I'm in a bad place mentally and if I had ability or access to a gun I would kill myself. I'm weak and I can't live in pain like this.
Two things:
My youngest brother died last year from suicide. He shot himself in the head with a 9mm. It was the most godawful experience his family could ever have. Please don't do it. It will gut anyone who loves you.

Two, for chronic pain are they giving you proper painkillers, like opioids? I know people like to avoid those, but some people genuinely need them to escape extreme pain that leaves them with no quality of life. If needed, those medicines can help. It's not like you need to do a physical job or operate heavy equipment now, so there is no harm in you taking such medicine.

>> No.58301958
File: 1.88 MB, 2394x4573, IMG_20240405_111718921_HDR~2.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58301958

>>58301868
I've been on every painkiller under the sun in the last 120 days. The only thing that actually kills pain is Dilaudid. And lemme tell you, that shit will put you on another timeline.

>> No.58302035
File: 13 KB, 474x325, Pepe hug.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58302035

>>58301958
Do what you have to do, buddy. Take the painkillers you need, even if they put you in another timeline. If the pain abates in the future, you can wean off them, or at least take a lower dose. But let each day be sufficient for the day, when it comes to challenges.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TeJTt5QH5VA&ab_channel=Orionsan

>> No.58302066

>>58302035
They won't give me Dilaudid. I fucking wish. I'm on 10mg lortab opioids. Idk how people get addicted I've had apple cider harder than this shit

>> No.58302288

My gold miners are back in the green, /can't make money general/ bros.

>> No.58302298
File: 667 KB, 640x380, 16354345678656789.gif [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58302298

>>58301755
Respect brother.

>> No.58302329
File: 46 KB, 977x672, 1693800348291464.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58302329

>>58302066
checked, I was in a rollover wreck anon, stayed buckled in and maybe 1/2 as bad as yours, and they gave me oxycontin, hydrocodone, lortab and some crap like muscle relaxants I can't remember. I found after a few months I felt better not taking any of the pharma crap and just downing a few strong German beers when I needed it. Also got some pain relief in physical therapy. The rx crap will definitely start to mess with your head and thinking and messed up my mood on a lot of days but your gonna make it bro.

>> No.58302344

>>58302066
That fucking sucks that they won't give it to you. This is the result of junkies, mainly using illegal fentanyl anyway, giving opioids such a bad name and doctors now being pussies about prescribing them.
Tell the doctors your pain is so bad you're considering suicide. Tell them it's unbearable and Dilaudid is the only thing that works on it.

>> No.58302384
File: 492 KB, 1225x861, 165435678656789.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58302384

Interesting chart from Crescat. I'll keep piling in my oil divvies into explorecos.

>> No.58302430

wow golds climbing! fantastic!
$3500 CAD coming this summer for sure!

>> No.58302438

>>58302344
I'm in California. They don't believe in pain
Think of the billboard lawyer meme
>Injured?
>Fuck you

California doesnt let you have anything for pain because it's wrongthink to believe pain exists and drugs are required

>> No.58302507

>>58302438
I've heard Colorado is the same way, and since I am going to Colorado for quite a while for a mining project, I am reluctant to bring my elderly parents here, as they both have severe pain, one due to stomach cancer and another due to terrible knees and a spinal column that's rotting away.

>> No.58302517
File: 436 KB, 750x400, Coal mine, Enlow Fork.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58302517

>>58302507
Ordinarily, my parents move with me on long jobs because I help care for them, but I might just move them to Nebraska and visit them on my off weeks. I will be working one week on, one week off, 12+ hour shifts.

>> No.58302561

>>58302517
Colorado is big but yeah if you can park them in Wyoming and you're in Denver that's not so bad. Or like you said about Nebraska. Wyoming is amazing tho ...nebraska? Not so much

>> No.58302587

>>58302438
>California
>>58302507
>Colorado
I was in Nevada when I got into a wreck and the Drs there it's like they get a bonus if they drug you to the max. But the pharmacists can be weird. I hobbled into a CVS with 2 black eyes, head wounds and the jewish looking pharmacist looked at my hydrocodone rx and said I'm not filling this. Went across the street to Smith's and they filled it no problem.

>> No.58302598
File: 29 KB, 474x319, Big Boy.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58302598

>>58302561
My dad really like North Platte, Nebraska, since it's one of the biggest rail yards in the world and he loves trains. I'll be working on the Western Slops of Colorado (thank God not in Denver).

>> No.58302611

>>58302598
Where on the western slope? I've fished all over that motherfucker. I'll tell you where the good restaurants, bar, and whorehouses are located. I might even tell you where to catch the big uns

>> No.58302624

>>58302587
Yeah, pharmacists have a lot of power to deny you medicines even prescribed by your doctor. It's a funky system we have.

>> No.58302637
File: 1.77 MB, 878x960, Coal, anthracite Alaska 3.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58302637

>>58302611
I don't want to say where exactly, because that could identify the mine, but in the northwest of Colorado.

>> No.58302665

>>58302624
>pharmacists have a lot of power to deny you medicines even prescribed by your doctor
Lmfao... How's that even a thing? Makes no sense.

>> No.58302695

>>58302637
Near Glenwood? I think I know where you're at. Didnt do much north of Gunnison. I fished mostly from Gunnison to Durango.

You do any hunting or fishing?

>> No.58302728

>>58302695
Not too far from there.
The trip from there to North Platte would be a bit over 400 miles, but I could do it in 7 hours or so and I get a whole week off, so I'll be able to see my ailing parents quite a bit.
Got a friend coming out here too. He's excited for the elk hunting.

>> No.58302746

>>58302728
God damn I want an elk so bad

>> No.58302754

>>58302728
Maybe more like 8 hours to North Platte every other week, and closer to 500 miles.
But I am used to traveling a lot, as I work specialty. I chose specialty to see all kinds of mines, particularly coal, in all sorts of areas, with all sorts of geological characteristics.

>> No.58302766
File: 1.47 MB, 737x800, 1678741028118655.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58302766

>>58301043
>>58301229
Yeah Peter isn't religious. He's not going to synagogue and scheming with all the Jews in the government. He's also had podcasts saying that Jews have been a net negative for the country because they vote for the democrats. Also Peter Schiffs bank was shut down because he goes against the narrative and hates democracy.

>> No.58302768
File: 108 KB, 800x1067, Coal mine, Lackawanna anthracite.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58302768

>>58302746
Elk is so tasty. I love elk burgers, elk jerky, and elk steaks.

>> No.58302785

>>58302746
Maybe come out to western Colorado and we'll have some elk meat with my hunter friend.

>> No.58302793
File: 34 KB, 600x400, Coal, Powder River Basin, North Antelope Rochelle Mine, PEabody.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58302793

>>58302766
>Yeah Peter isn't religious. He's not going to synagogue and scheming with all the Jews in the government. He's also had podcasts saying that Jews have been a net negative for the country because they vote for the democrats. Also Peter Schiffs bank was shut down because he goes against the narrative and hates democracy.
Damn! Peter Schiff if based. May God smile on him.

>> No.58302983

>>58302785
I will. I'm bedridden and may never walk again which would mean I wouldn't be able to drive again without some upgrades to my truck. I'm also on felony probation so it'll be next year before I can do anything at all for that reason

>> No.58302995

>>58302768
I have never had elk. I wonder if it's similar to reindeer meat.

>> No.58303081

>>58302983
Whenever you can make the trip, I'd welcome you.
Also, if my friend bags some elk this fall, let's say, I'll try to get some of the best cuts to ship to you (maybe packed in dry ice or smoked), if that's alright with you.

>> No.58303098
File: 148 KB, 900x900, 10-oz-silver-bar-merry-christmas-rudolph_224939_obv.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58303098

>>58302995
I've never had reindeer meat, so I don't know. :)
But elk is very good meat.
By the way, I have some of these bars from years ago and I think they're cute. I won't sell them.

>> No.58303107

>>58303081
Fuck that would be amazing
Thank you

>> No.58303123

>>58303098
>I've never had reindeer meat
I wonder if it's only us Finns that eat reindeer

>> No.58303140

>>58303123
I bet mapleniggers eat it. Ask panman

>> No.58303179

>>58303140
upon some googling it seems Canadian reindeer are near extinct. They're a delicacy over here as well so I don't eat it often. But the taste is very rich and somewhat similar to horse meat, but definitely distinct and I like it more. It's also very tender and lean, not very fatty or gamey at all.

>> No.58303213

>>58303179
How the fuck can they be almost extinct? Canada is massive. And most of it is completely uninhabitable unless you're Jeremiah Johnson. How do they know how many reindeer exist?
God damnit I hate the government so much

>> No.58303214
File: 32 KB, 1120x125, nicola.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58303214

Any 2020 bros remember Nicola? These guys could turn out to have a lot of copper, to go with their mill.

>> No.58303254
File: 49 KB, 959x520, PETE.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58303254

>schiffposting

>> No.58303278
File: 112 KB, 1920x1080, 1590093651129.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58303278

>>58303213
NGO link so some salt is needed for seasoning but here's what they have to say

https://thenarwhal.ca/canada-deep-snow-caribou-vanish/
>‘Death by a thousand clearcuts’: Canada’s deep-snow caribou are vanishing
>The B.C. government spends millions on extreme measures — like wolf culls and maternity pens — to support these mountain-loving herds found nowhere else in the world. Yet such efforts fail to offset the habitat destruction at the root of their disappearance
>Over the past 15 years, a calamity has befallen B.C.’s deep-snow caribou — a caribou ecotype found nowhere else in the world. In 2005, B.C. had 18 deep-snow caribou herds. Today, only ten remain. All are on the cusp of local extinction. Nine deep-snow caribou herds once lived to the south of the Columbia North herd. Eight are gone. Only about two dozen animals remain in the ninth herd, an amalgamation of two herds. Bucking the dispiriting trend, and following costly interventions such as shooting wolves, in 2022 the Columbia North population grew by almost two dozen, to 209 animals.

They're not very abundant over here in Finland either. According to the European Climate, Infrastructure and Environment Executive Agency, only about 3,000 wild forest reindeers remain in Finland, and 5,000 in Finland and Russia together. We have an active reindeer herding industry which means we don't hunt them but idk how well the wild reindeer population is going to do in the future. At least there are active conservation efforts being made globally, so that's comforting to know at least.

>> No.58303291

>>58282984
So what about junior miners? I sold all my calls already and want to buy more but I'm not sure. Is the bull just starting? Need some opinions.

>> No.58303307

>>58303213
>>58303278
Also according to >wikipedia, the Woodland Caribou population is also only about 6,500

>> No.58303312
File: 17 KB, 474x355, Dove.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58303312

>>58303107
You are most welcome.
I am indebted to you for your work in creating /cmmg/, which is one of my favorite haunts.

>> No.58303372

>>58303291
we're one month into a bull market. Last time a mini-bull in gold miners in 2015/2016 lasted for four months only because they were oversold. In the 70s and 00s, well, look at the gold chart. Most recently after the coof crash the bullrun lasted for six months. Zoom out.
>inb4 spoonfeed me on stocks
no lurk moar

>> No.58303383

>>58303278
>At least there are active conservation efforts being made globally, so that's comforting to know at least.
Deep down I'm a tree hugger and environmentalist in my own way. I love forests and lakes and rivers. I love mountains. I like cool animals and don't want them to go extinct. But I believe in responsible logging, responsible hunting, and I think hunted meat is more humane than factory farming. That's not just an opinion, it's empirical fact that hunted animals, killed with one shot, suffer a lot less than factory farmed animals.
I think environmentalism is perfectly compatible with strong mining and logging and agricultural sectors. and of course mining companies shouldn't leave shitheaps of toxic materials behind just stinking up the landscape. We in the West still have much to teach the world about how to do logging and mining the right way, and as developing nations become wealthier, they'll start to value the environment more. That's the trajectory we in North America went down, at least.

>> No.58303389

>>58303254
Not all heroes wear capes

>> No.58303414
File: 217 KB, 720x658, Screenshot_20240405_135215_YouTube.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58303414

>>58303254
Speak of the devil. He's going live now.
https://www.youtube.com/live/tGqOZaMGLSA?si=G688j0iiiT3rv-vE

>> No.58303436
File: 87 KB, 250x225, Peter-Schiff-Smile-Head-Shot-square.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58303436

Also I'm surprised how lively CMMG has been. I remember when it was dying everyday.

>> No.58303469

>>58303383
I wholeheartedly agree with you. I couldn't care less about cow farts and muh climate but true environmentalism matters to me. I still value industry a lot of course but things could always be run more responsibly. In recent years we had a very irresponsible Australian-listed mining company, think it was called Dragon Mining, operating a gold mine over here in Finland. They clear cut woodlands without permits, contaminated groundwater, had an illegal literal waste dump inside the mine among other cases of poor conduct. It took a while for the authorities to shut them down after vehement action from locals and environmentalists, but the company was scummy through and through. They even communicated openly to their shareholders that they just want to mine as much gold as possible before they get shut down and then they moved their listing to China to avoid legal liabilities. Shit like this is why industries are given a bad name, and that's just on top of the actual honest human mistakes that can cause huge damage, like tailings dam failures and oil spills.

>> No.58303483

>>58303436
that was like a month ago

>> No.58303487
File: 1.96 MB, 1152x768, Coal for coking.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58303487

Here is an association of some major met coal producers. I believe they are all pure play met coal miners, though am not absolutely sure. It looks like it, though.
Alpha and Coronado are the biggest, the rest quite a bit smaller, but these companies are all worth taking a look at if you want to chart met coal stocks against other commodities or just want to invest in steelmaking coal producers.

https://www.metcoalproducers.com/

>> No.58303523
File: 55 KB, 640x480, Buick Century 1993.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58303523

>>58303469
Totally agree, fren, and very well put!
I am an environmentalist at heart -- save for the CO2 emphasis, since CO2 is not pollution at all -- and I am a humanist. It's possible to be both.
And the mining industry needs to do better at policing itself and calling out bad miners like the one you described. Bad actors like that just bring heat down on the whole sector, when in fact many mining companies are doing quite a good job with environmental stewardship.
I will make it a point to call out bad environmental practices that I see or hear about for exactly that reason: keeping heat off the industry and maintaining the good name of the responsible actors, who deserve so much credit for making our way of life possible.

>> No.58303547
File: 171 KB, 720x941, Screenshot_20240405_140427_Brave.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58303547

Bros... Don't get too cocky...

>> No.58303570
File: 1.12 MB, 3891x3160, Europe by forest cover.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58303570

>>58303469
Also, I love how Finland, like Japan, is so heavily forested -- is Europe's most forested country by area. Don't become another Britain. They deforested to the point where the Industrial Revolution was a survival necessity (necessity is the mother of invention). Coal was needed just to replace wood as a heating and cooking fuel just because Britain had so few trees left by around 1700-1800.
Well, I guess all's well that ends well, and the Industrial Revolution is Britain's greatest gift to humankind. But still, keep your lovely forests intact and amazing.

>> No.58303571

>>58303547
Zoom in

>> No.58303572

>>58303547
wild how all the daily charts look bullish. There's just no sign of breaks just yet

>> No.58303635

>>58303570
Oh we will, our forests are our pride. We actually have a pioneering and world leading forestry, pulp and paper industry with multiple world leaders in the sector. We also have many private forest owners. And all of the above conduct the forestry business in a cyclical manner: for every tree that is cut, another is planted. And of course there are also protected forests and lots of forestry-related specifics that help keep the ecosystem lively. Recently Europe has tried to start dictating how member states should conduct themselves with regard to forests but we Finns have collectively had a disdainful reaction to the ignoramuses of Central Europe trying to tell us how to steward our forests. It's not us who have cut down the whole country for farmland!

>> No.58303696
File: 204 KB, 1158x1002, Logging harvester.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58303696

>>58303635
Great on you Finns. You do Europe proud. Central Europeans need to learn from you about how to practice proper sustainable forestry techniques, not the other way around.
I got a job offer one time to work in logging operating a harvester. Aside from mining and railroading, that might be the job that intrigues me most. I almost took the offer. The company I'd have worked for was big on responsible forest management, which includes thinning out overgrowth so that forests have a proper age pyramid for their trees (aren't too top heavy).
Lumber is something that should be more often discussed on this forum.

>> No.58303745

>>58303696
Me on the right

>> No.58303759

>>58303696
>Great on you Finns. You do Europe proud. Central Europeans need to learn from you about how to practice proper sustainable forestry techniques, not the other way around.
they could also learn some fiscal prudence... Central Europeans are much more indebted than we are, though our debt to GDP also rose a lot during the coof silly times. We're now cutting government expenses and raising taxes to the tune of lots of complaining from the people, but we're doing that anyways. Most people agree that we have "too much debt", and in a sane world I would agree 100%, but I guess we're fools for being the only ones not racking on massive amounts of debt while still using the Euro.
>logging, forest management
that shit gets surprisingly complex, like sometimes they purposefully leave rotten trees standing for ecosystem reasons and stuff.
>Lumber is something that should be more often discussed on this forum.
definitely, and when the time is right I'll be interested in investing in some of those domestic forest, pulp & paper stocks in the Helsinki exchange. But for now it's almost entirely gold for me.

>> No.58303800
File: 299 KB, 1068x811, Logging processor.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58303800

>>58303745
Logging is a good paying, highly skilled job, albeit dangerous. To young'uns with a sense of adventure who want a trade, that's one to look into.

>>58303759
I wish Finland hadn't adopted the Euro. You guys would be the most exceptional country in the world.

>> No.58303836

>>58303800
at the time getting into the Euro made sense. We were just coming out of a huge depression in the 90s, and there was a desire for a stronger currency. The Mark was often devalued because we had an export-driven economy, and during the depression people's US Dollar denominated denbts fucked them in the arse. And for a long time being in the Euro was a fantastic choice. Hell, maybe it's for the best even now. I'm not sure our stagnant economy would support a resilient currency. I know the Mark wasn't one.

>> No.58303894
File: 52 KB, 474x266, Gothic.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58303894

>>58303836
Very good points, ones which outsiders, many of whom have a kneejerk reaction against the Euro and the EU, might miss.
I wish the EU could succeed in fostering trade and closer political ties -- with a strong, stable currency. What I don't like are the diktats coming out of Belgium on all sorts of stupid shit like shutting down the world's most efficient farms. The EU is not a bad idea, but the execution has been poor. The idea of trying to create some overarching political structure that precludes another World War is noble, but the devil is in the details, and there are a lot of problems with the way the EU has been run.

>> No.58303970

>>58303894
I think for the most part the Euro has succeeded in being a strong, stable currency for a long time. What remains to be seen is whether it can remain that way. The sovereign debt crisis of Greece during the GFC was the canary in the coal mine, but I think those sovereign debt problems are just as bad in the US as they are in certain EU member states. I should mention that most EU countries have debt to GDP levels well below 100% and the average for the Euro Area is about 80% which isn't terrible. But there are a few very poor examples like Greece and Italy which have higher debt to GDP than even the US. I'm not much of a doomer but a big reason why I like gold so much is because I have begun to have less and less trust in the USD and Euro. I think another sovereign debt crisis could be coming within this decade.
>What I don't like are the diktats coming out of Belgium
same. They've started to become a bit drunk on their own power methinks. Some of their directives have been for good but some have become way too authoritarian in nature as of late. And the bureaucracy of it all is staggering, I often see career politicians first fucking up things domestically during their terms here and then moving into a cozy position in Brussels, that shit makes me question their allegiance to the people. I damn near consider them traitors.
>the devil is in the details
That's the European bureaucracy in a nutshell

>> No.58304030

>>58303970
Looking at it historically, you could say the Euro has succeeded for more than two decades in being one of the world's leading currencies. And indeed many European countries have debt to GDP ratios that are better than what we have in the U.S.
Perhaps sound money is the key to a lasting European Union -- that, and less authoritarianism in Brussels with more rights for the member states, or perhaps EU-wide votes on major policies. I'd like to see Europe succeed and become the envy of the world again because, deep down, I am a Western patriot (though I like Russia too and have nothing against them).
In the end, I think energy is the basis of all wealth, since energy is the resource needed to make use of any other resource. If we increase our energy supplies and find practical uses for this excess energy, we can right the ship. There are of course a lot of details that this statement doesn't cover, but that, I think, is the crux of the issue. Energy shortage always leads to stagnation. Other factors can lead to that too, but Europe is in an energy crunch lately -- and judging by fuel and electricity prices, so is the U.S., when compared to, say, 20 years ago.

>> No.58304062

>>58304030
I would like a sounder currency than fiat for sure but I don't know what it would look like. The Gold Standard failed eventually too, and gold and silver coinage based currencies did also. It seems currencies always get debased eventually. But maybe a more robust system could be created. It would too fail eventually though. And totally agreed on energy. Energy is the economy.

>> No.58304075

Shle up 7.8% today
That's about 50% this month

>> No.58304106

>>58302288
Double checked and kekked, mein negger

>> No.58304108

>>58304075
how far away are you from a 10x fren? SHLE has just kept running

>> No.58304109

Damn IPT doing some crazy shit right now and I have no idea why. I decided not to increase stake at the lows, oh well. At least the bags are lighter

>> No.58304125

>>58304108
I think I'm halfway there I think I averaged 1.40 entry

>> No.58304127

>>58304109
hint: look at gold and silver

>> No.58304156
File: 152 KB, 1024x916, Jefferson on banks.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58304156

>>58304062
Jefferson said we need a revolution every generation to refresh the system. He was onto something. Every system dies eventually -- often it goes screaming into that good night, taking many people with it. But we might need to internalize the idea that every system is mortal and needs to be revitalized every now and then: governments, businesses, industries, currencies etc.

>> No.58304162

Impact is going back to a buck

>> No.58304166

>>58304156
>permanent revolution
american founding fathers were the original trotskyists

>> No.58304183

>>58304162
maybe $3 when silver passes $40

>> No.58304217

>>58304166
What's the alternative, a system that somehow lasts forever? It's not going to happen.
Jefferson was just speaking truth. All systems decay and become corrupt and need to be refreshed or replaced from time to time.

>> No.58304220

>>58304183
If it goes to $3 I'm retiring

>> No.58304298

>>58304217
Gold and silver and capitalism are the system that can last forever if we stop fighting wars for Jews and feeding brown people

>> No.58304312

>>58304166
This is where stupidity sets in. Sorry, but when your mind is so filled with ideological associations that you take a 200 year old statement that sounds only vaguely like a statement someone else made 100 years ago, then invalidate that statement because of the superficial similarity, then you're drunk on ideology and can't think straight.
It doesn't matter what Trotsky believed when it comes to entropy applying to social systems just as much as to natural systems, because this is a fact, and people noticed it long before Trotsky formulated his Bolshevist version of it.

>> No.58304339

>>58304298
Even those systems would get corrupted and become cronyism. A currency backed by PMs would have the ratio changed over time, so that 1000 dollars backed by an ounce of gold eventually becomes 2000 dollars backed by one ounce of gold, when it's convenient or necessary for the currency issuer to do so. And capitalism will become cronyism when unethical actors decide to start issuing bribes to politicians in some form or other.
Every social system has a lifespan and must be renewed when it has become too degenerate.

>> No.58304346

>>58304312
>>58304339
sounds like judeo-masonic niggerbabble to me bro.

>> No.58304366

>>58303571
New paradigm

>> No.58304441

>>58304298
I was thinking about this today. Even with a minarchist state, on the premises that all humans aren't equal some will accumulate more wealth than most, and eventually out of pure selfishness (self-interest) will use the state to cement and grow their positions in the market which in turn starts the whole corruption cycle, more and more socialism is introduced into the system to protect the interest of the few, which leads to massive wealth gaps that I would imagine are impossible under a minarchist state, because in such a state there's no wealth transfer from the 99% through taxation and inflation towards the 1% and no laws and regulations that suppress the competition. So this wealth gap leads to protests against the system and the establishment creates all these fake issues to divert attention from themselves and continue the plunder. This lasts until a financial breaking point is reached, and this is followed by a revolution usually financed by the ruling class itself, to reset the system. And the cycle of plunder continues. Retarding growth,
innovation for the benefit of the few.

>> No.58304679

>>58304346
Then you have a low level of literacy and listen to too much niggerbabble.
Seriously, clue me in on the eternal social system that's immune to entropy.

>> No.58304697

How to exposure to Morocco miners?

>> No.58304701

>>58304339
This is a stateless society more or less

>> No.58304707

>>58304697
there's Aya Gold & Silver. Otherwise idk I think I looked at one potash developer over there but it wasn't anything special

>> No.58304711

>>58304697
Email cock pics to them

>> No.58304734

New bread
>>58304721
>>58304721
>>58304721

>> No.58304782

>>58304679
An eternal social system that never degrades sounds like Marxism to me: an attempt to establish heaven on earth. It's certainly utopian.

>> No.58304920

>>58303140
i ve had cariboo meat which is similar but i found it really gamey and not appealing at all. Moose is far superior.

>> No.58304943

>>58303278
yep our cariboo populations in the interior are nearly extinct, their not meant to exist in this modern world. Their hold overs from the last ice age, when climates were cooler and wetter. They feed only a very specific gradient point on the mountains, sub alpine, which is rapidly vanishing due to us logging every slope but also due to simply warmer winters. Cariboo are far more prevalent in the near arctic though.

>> No.58304966

>>58303469
fuck i hate companies like that, because they are the reason we get so much hate across the rest of the industry.

>> No.58305080

>>58304920
How is elk compared to moose meat?

>> No.58305113

>>58304920
I wonder if moose is similar to reindeer then since reindeer isn't gamey at all either

>> No.58305696

>>58302766
Maybe it's as low as 1 out of every 100,000, but there truly are a few good ones in every demographic.

>> No.58305716

>>58303383
Almost all reasonable people agree with you. Environmentalists are so insane they brand views like yours as equivalent to the bad guys in Fern Gulley.

>> No.58306452
File: 804 KB, 2448x2002, IMG_20240405_210055.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58306452

Comfy SUV anon checking in again.