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File: 27 KB, 474x316, Coal miners, Russia.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58242128 No.58242128 [Reply] [Original]

Russian Coal Mining Edition

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 [Embed]

Previous: >>58176526

>> No.58242234
File: 42 KB, 598x549, BHS.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58242234

Graeme must be zeroing in on the bonanza

>> No.58242681

>>58242234
when even this POS is going up you know the bull trade is on

>> No.58243250

>>58242681
the bull trade started in October when Powell flinched. The question is how long until reality sets in again

>> No.58244344
File: 3 KB, 172x26, ohfuck.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58244344

GUESS WHO'S BACK

>>58242234
He's probably gone through every hooker in Thailand at this point. Bayhorse is almost nostalgic to me, I remember the relentless shilling at $0.65

>> No.58244904

>>58244344
Is he the guy who contracts with Freeport McMoRan?

>> No.58245422

>>58244904
what?

>> No.58246278

Bought RIO above 70, am I gonna make it

>> No.58247044

>>58242128
Now is unironically the time to buy gold and silver stocks

>> No.58247074

>>58247044
god dammit. retry

>> No.58248655

>>58245422
That braggadocious fellow who talks about contracting in Colorado and being a millions and who's kind of a know it all.

>> No.58248718

>>58248655
That's big bob, he's based. RocketRed is an insufferable shill from ceo who sometimes comes here to spam his penny shitcos. Literally worse than a pajeet crypto spambot whenever he's on

>> No.58248966

>>58248718
He seems okay sometimes. He knows about Colorado mining, which, since I am going to Colorado, is relevant to me, though I will be working in coal and he is not a coal contractor.

>> No.58248999

>>58248718
I wonder if he's the CEO of Zemlock.

>> No.58249250

Ok I was watching some gore for ~4 hours, looks like the cartel lost in the meantime. We are so fucking back bros.

>> No.58249773
File: 6 KB, 250x240, 1672059372639727.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58249773

>>58249250
>Ok I was watching some gore for ~4 hours

>> No.58249896
File: 2.32 MB, 1304x1026, 176543456787656789.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58249896

>>58249773
Yeah, It was one of those days. One gore video leads to another, next thing I'm watching beheadings. You know the feeling right?

>> No.58249938

>>58241982
The double digit IQs can't help but throw themselves into the flames. So until we're ok killing them off nothing will change

>> No.58250727

>>58242234
How many ounces of silver are they producing ever week? Did they ever get a mining permit?

>> No.58250893

>>58250727
a grand total of zero ounces

>> No.58251087

>>58248999
>I wonder if he's the CEO of Zemlock.
no, I employ all of 16 people. A very small business, but one that I own fully. We do about a million a year gross, mostly environmental work. About half for the feds and the other half usually for majors. I don't advertise, my clients know where to find me. Even my neighbors have no idea what I do for a living.

>> No.58251111

>>58250893
Cmon they must produce at least one oz of silver?

>> No.58251130
File: 139 KB, 720x960, Coal, rainbow anthracite.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58251130

>>58251087
I was mistaken. Cool gig you have, though
Do you do environmental work for coal mines out west?

>> No.58251143

>>58251111
checked, they cannot since it's a lifestyle company, a literal scam

>> No.58251171

>>58251130
no, I do metals abatement only. We're certified for asbestos and biohazard/crime scene stuff, but I prefer to just work on metal mine sites in my area. It's good money, not much travel.

>> No.58251173
File: 120 KB, 474x755, Leviathan.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58251173

>>58249938
What's wrong with saying a functional society needs religion and government?

>> No.58251200

>>58251171
Cool stuff

>> No.58251645

>>58251200
I love it, I spend a lot of my spare time poking around old mine dumps anyways. Getting paid to work on and around them is perfect for me. I get to see how people worked 150 years ago right up to today.

>> No.58251851
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58251851

>>58251645
I too am fascinated by the history of mining.

>> No.58251900

>>58251851
Poor kid looks like he's chained by his nut sack to that heavy coal cart

>> No.58252064
File: 50 KB, 694x540, lake county co.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58252064

>>58251851
it's very cool stuff

>> No.58254266

>>58251173
It's inaccurate
For a thousand years Icelandic people's had no government and nearly no religion

>> No.58254478
File: 114 KB, 1920x1587, steel10.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58254478

Steel is still going strong in America, but internationally seems to be still trying to find a bottom.

I've been trying to learn about oil rig counts, because oil rigs consume a lot of steel. They not only have permanent steel, but also consumable steel that they have to keep replacing. Super interesting. The rig counts you can find on TradingView, I'm trying to find what they correlate with.

>> No.58254645

>>58254266
>For a thousand years Icelandic people's had no government and nearly no religion
Please explain in detail
I find these claims exceedingly hard to believe.

>> No.58254978

>>58251173
Hobbes only makes the case for the state, not religion. And his argument is pseudo democratic and totalitarian which is probably the opposite of what you want to argue for

>> No.58255006

>>58254645
Google it fren
My laptop is still seized u der a warrant and I'm still recovering from a extremely traumatic experience in a head on collision. I don't re recall the books I found it in just now but in my defense I suffer a brain injury and some information I feel I should know immediately I can't seem to recall at all
I think the first book I read it in was mentioned briefly in "but who would build the roads" a short pamphlet of basic arguments that a new libertarian like myself at the time would be likely to encounter.
But it's not exactly a thousand years more like 850 I think. White people don't need that stupid shit. Those vikings had it figured out, and eventually we will return to that lifestyle

>> No.58255037

>>58251111
So they doubled last year's production numbers?
Nice. Maybe I'll buy in if it dips

>> No.58255186

>>58254978
No, I understand all of that. Hobbes was a social contract theorist, not a divine right theorist.
I just put up that graphic to be provocative. Yes, I do believe the state is necessary for civilization, which literally means the way of life of the cities, which relies on very complex social organization.
What's the alternative to the state for any society advanced enough to have agriculture? Syndicalism? That's just a state by other means.
The only stateless societies that ever existed were pre-neolithic, old stone age foraging bands. Whenever a surplus arises, a caste of people monopolize most of that surplus and control it, and they create armies to protect that surplus from social insiders and from foreign invaders. This is how you get the monopoly on violence.

>> No.58255214

>>58254978
And name me any atheistic society that endured more than, say, a century.
And don't say Buddhist societies, because even though the Buddha was agnostic, teaching that it's impossible to know if God exists, institutional Buddhism is awash in religious mythology with godlike figures such as the Great Bodhisattvas.

>> No.58255323

>>58255006
The Norse peoples had chiefs and tribal kingship, which isn't exactly like the kingship found in a civilization, but is nonetheless a form of kingship suited to an advanced rural, rather than urban, society.

>> No.58255364

>>58255214
religion and government are the same thing. Atheists rarely survive as they are a threat to both.

>> No.58255949

>>58255323
https://www.lewrockwell.com/?s=iceland+anarchy

so this is a good starting point for archives. idk if my id changed but i pulled out the new laptop to look stuff up. i had a mountain of shit from the mises institute but who knows if ill ever see it again.
lemme do some digging but this is a good place to start if you literally have zero knowledge of libertarianism and its rich history. you might know more than me, idk. but im the mises guy itt and i talk about this with these autistic commies all the time.

>> No.58256116
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58256116

>>58255364
> Again the devil took him up into a very high mountain, and shewed him all the kingdoms of the world, and the glory of them,
>And said to him: All these will I give thee, if falling down thou wilt adore me. >Then Jesus saith to him: Begone, Satan: for it is written, The Lord thy God shalt thou adore, and him only shalt thou serve. Mathew 4:8-10

All nations and false religions are lucifers and atheists are his biggest fan because they have the gayest and worst of sin which is Pride.

>> No.58256290

>>58255949
good video on iceland
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b8Re6l1-qFw

>> No.58256450

>>58256116
im atheist and im not very prideful. nor am i very tolerant of kikes, niggers, queers and other trash. i dont need god or the govt to tell me to hate these things because mother nature is able to tell me that without those institutions

>>58256290
thank you desu

>> No.58257857
File: 57 KB, 482x370, redandbobeatfourleggedturkey.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58257857

rollin for gold to jump 3% tomorrow

>> No.58258016
File: 63 KB, 841x745, schiffbros.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58258016

if adrian day is the great stock picker that schiff says, why do the gdx and gdxj beat him?

>> No.58258304
File: 3.57 MB, 638x468, 1511871771222.webm [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58258304

rollin for $2300/$26 Tuesday

>> No.58259579

Last bump from me
11:11 California time. I'm whooped

>> No.58259954

youtube com/watch?v=AvI1H0IsHnM+

Ban the Bots

>> No.58260119

https://www.mining.com/web/canadas-mild-winter-disrupts-key-ice-road-to-remote-arctic-diamond-mines/

>> No.58261319
File: 163 KB, 720x972, Screenshot_20240402_012930_Brave.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58261319

... So when are the normies going to panic?

>> No.58262287
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58262287

>>58261319
TODAY!
>JAPAN BACK IN PLAY

>> No.58263667

Did Gold finally breakout?

>> No.58264080

>>58263667
yeah about a month ago

>> No.58264326

THE CARTEL IS LOSING! GARY WAS RIGHT! TRUST THE PLAN! NIPPON IN TWO MORE WEEKS!

>> No.58264933

Are rare earths welcome here? Interested in investing some, what option to buy is there other than Robinhood or Stash?

>> No.58264960
File: 147 KB, 1140x749, SCOT.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58264960

SCOTTIE BROS WAGMI

https://www.juniorminingnetwork.com/junior-miner-news/press-releases/2659-tsx-venture/scot/158363-scottie-resources-announces-financing-package-with-franco-nevada-corporation.html

>> No.58265252

>>58264933
yeah they're commodities too.
>what option to buy is there other than Robinhood or Stash?
not sure what you're asking about, do you mean that you don't have a brokerage account yet and want to know different broker options? /smg/ is better for that but if you're a yuro I can recommend Interactive Brokers

>> No.58265308

>>58265252
>do you mean that you don't have a brokerage account yet
Yeah that's right, I'll go check that thread then as I'm in the US. I only dabbled in those apps back when GME was a thing and I hated them, want something else

>> No.58265378

But on the note about rare earth, what are anyone's thoughts on Niocorp and the mine they want to open in Nebraska?

>> No.58265823

>>58265378
I haven't looked at the company but they were a bit of a trending stock on /smg/ a couple of years back. Probably a high grade hard rock deposit, since it's in the US I guess it might be subsidized. The Aussies subsidized some REE project a while back. But idk anything specific about Niocorp haven't looked at them

>> No.58266297
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58266297

>>58242234
Did Graeme find another porphyry?

>> No.58266477

>>58266297
Looks like It's going to be a Tier 1 deposit.

>> No.58266504

>>58264933
if you don't have your weight in bismuth youre doing it wrong.
about as rare as silver, emerging industrial uses, costs like $10/lb if you find the right supplier.
Also tellurium is cool. Rarer than gold, and like $80/kg while gold is what $65k...
less industrial uses, but its being used in solar.
I like to stack things like this because of the asymetric opportunity.
can't lose too much money but there is ez 10x potential for both, maybe more.
And i like having physical things because most of my money is tied up in magic internet money.

>> No.58266515

>>58265252
>>58265308
interactive brokers is available in the US too
.t burger

>> No.58268343

Bam

>> No.58268873

>silver up 3.5%
>Today
>Thread has spaghetti western desolation and tumble weeds all morning
Bullish

>> No.58269084

>>58268873
Don't mind me, just sitting in front of my computer scratching my balls.

>> No.58269086

>SLB Starts Oilfield Service M&A Drive.The world’s largest oilfield services firmSLB (NYSE:SLB)agreed to buy rivalChampionX (NASDAQ:CHX)in an all-stock deal valued at $7.75 billion that’s expected to close before end-2024, with the latter surging 10% in pre-market trading on Tuesday

>ChampionX shareholders will receive 0.735 shares of SLB common stock, or $40.59 per share, representing a premium of 14.7% to ChampionX's last closing price.

damnn I own both

>> No.58269233
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58269233

IT HAS BEGUN!

>> No.58269284

>>58269086
gz
>>58269233
even the crypto boys are beginning to notice. Now btc and tech only needs to crash and let the gold FOMO begin

>> No.58269480

>>58269084
Post brown spokes of rectum

>> No.58269578

>>58264933
We have discussed ree in depth here. Check the archives.
All commodities are welcome, but our focus is mining and energy since the threads inception. There's not a ton of knowledge base, at least the conversations aren't as frequent, broad, or in depth. However this shouldn't be discouraging in any manner. Quite the opposite, in fact. We love learning, so anything you can teach, the floor is yours.

t. Lassenigger

>> No.58269626

>>58269578
yeah and I am also happy to teach if I have knowledge to share

>> No.58269714

>>58269626
Don't wait to be prodded. Just share what you know when you have the time
Drop links and shit along the way fren

>> No.58270218

Warrior Met Coal having a bad few days

>> No.58270219

>>58269714
I prefer to answer questions, but as you alluded to I have shared some REE info in previous threads

>> No.58270347

>>58270219
Well shit if nobody knows enough to ask questions were gonna be up shit creek without paddles

>> No.58270522
File: 322 KB, 717x1961, Screenshot_20240402_130152_Brave.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58270522

SIRS, DO NOT REDEEM THE GOLD!!!

>> No.58270645
File: 94 KB, 1000x613, Coal mining, Siberia.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58270645

Got some communications going with Russian coal mining companies. I am feeling that Russian patriotism in my bones -- for the Motherland!

>> No.58270726
File: 100 KB, 960x952, 1709516835319195.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58270726

>>58270645
>Falling for the nationalism trap.

>> No.58270738

>>58270726
Nationalism is the natural state of man, an extension of the tribe to large-scale societies.

>> No.58270742
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58270742

Japan bros. It's happening!

>> No.58270795
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58270795

>>58270738
Nationalism is a tool for the ruling class to turn the masses against their neighbors (brothers), and gain something in the process.

>> No.58270799
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58270799

>>58270742
kek

>> No.58270845
File: 89 KB, 960x535, schiffposting.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58270845

Pete on fire today

>> No.58270875

>>58270845
I mean he ain't wrong.

>> No.58270894
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58270894

>>58258304
>$26
That part was correct

>> No.58270981

>>58270795
>Nationalism is a tool for the ruling class to turn the masses against their neighbors (brothers), and gain something in the process.
That's just communism. Ruling classes are a natural phenomenon and probably a good thing.

>> No.58271044

>>58270738
I think the state (especially a foreign state) is a poor substitute for a close-knit group, family or tribe. I have a degree of nationalism myself too though, but I care much less about my country than I do about my people

>> No.58271052
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58271052

>>58270522
checked, and silver

>> No.58271089
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58271089

>>58270845
based Schiff taking his chance to dab on the crypto maxis. And it got even more based when I realized just now that the response by said maxis will be to dig their heels in even further, refusing to be long precious metals. The FOMO will be all the greater when they eventually fold
>captcha: M04NS

>> No.58271128

>muh cartel

>> No.58271135

>>58270981
>That's just communism
Pretty sure it's nationalism, but sure commies can be nationalistic too.
>Ruling classes are a natural phenomenon and probably a good thing.
I can't argue against them being a natural phenomenon, because I haven't really studied the subject enough, but I remember something about medieval Iceland having no government, and I've looked at a few primitive societies and the "ruling class" in these examples didn't use coercion, but they were well off people that were problem solvers and were approached by members of the community to settle disputes.

>> No.58271166

>>58271044
Yeah racism (as in sticking within your race) is superior to nationalism, although there's arguments to be made against that too.

>> No.58271192

>>58271128
I will now subscribe to Gary Savage's $900/year service where I get to read his hit-or-miss technical analysis, political commentary and condescending remarks when questioned on previous (deleted) trades

>> No.58271208

>>58271135
Having a ruling class and believing in it is communism?
I am for a ruling class, though would prefer the old WASPs to the Jews.

>> No.58271226

>>58271135
Indeed, paleolithic hunter gather bands just had ad hoc leaders, like the best hunter was acknowledged as an authority on hunting, and the best teacher was acknowledged as a shaman.
But all complex societies, from agriculture onward, have formed states.
Stateless societies only work when there is no surplus to hoard or steal.

>> No.58271239

>>58271226
Medieval Iceland might have had such a tiny surplus that only very primitive forms of communal decision-making prevailed. But once you get armies, top-down decision making and bureaucracy become the standard.

>> No.58271255

>>58271239
And armies form whenever there is a surplus to hoard or steal (protect or take). The military command structure, which must be authoritarian by necessity, becomes the model for the state.

>> No.58271269

>>58271255
And yes, I would prefer an ideal AnCap world, but I just do not see it possible in this world, given human nature. Maybe we could genetically engineer humans to improve them and get rid of all hoarding and stealing, or to not care about protecting or taking surpluses using armies. I have no idea.

>> No.58271304

>>58266504
Who do you sell bismuth to when/if you need to?

>> No.58271349

>>58271166
I guess the point I was trying to make was moreso that the state isn't always on the people's side, and that is why I don't consider myself a nationalist. Sometimes there are times when the people have to start lynching tyrants like the good old days. As for race, I do place some importance on it but culture matters more -- of course they are not entirely separable but I can accept people of different races much better in my country when they make an effort to integrate into my culture. I don't like dealing in absolutes so my takes on these things are perhaps a bit vague and balanced, pardon.

>> No.58271421

>>58264960
Are these sons of bitches actually going to make us money now?

>> No.58271440

>>58264960
getting Franco-Nevada on board is a massive vote of confidence

>> No.58271446

>>58271208
>Having a ruling class and believing in it is communism?
I never said that.
>I am for a ruling class,
I don't like being coerced personally. At least you acknowledge that the state is a tool of the ruling class to plunder surplus capital from their slaves. And yeah it would be perfect if everyone was an AnCap, but that's just a utopian dream and not reality. I could live with a minarchy idk if it will ever happen though.

>> No.58271474

>>58271349
>I can accept people of different races much better in my country when they make an effort to integrate into my culture
Oh, sure but that's usually not the case.

>> No.58271484

>>58271446
The bigger the surplus, the bigger the state.
I am just a "matter of fact" person, not an idealist. A pragmatist, if you will
Yes, the state grabs surplus, protects surplus for its owners, and many find this unfair. As far as I am concerned, it is what it is.
I would prefer lower taxes on skilled workers, who do perhaps the most important work in upholding society, but I doubt it'll happen, as we have little institutional power and influence.

>> No.58271597

>>58271484
>Yes, the state grabs surplus, protects surplus for its owners, and many find this unfair. As far as I am concerned, it is what it is.
If you understand the system you can protect yourself by acquiring foreign residencies that minimalize the taxes you pay, owning assets etc... Fact of the matter is most people aren't aware of how the system functions, and what bothers me is the effects the this plunder has on human behaviour (some of which I cannot even conceive). People are so short-sighted these days, they cannot plan for the future because they're being plundered out of their minds and because of the business cycle. I find it hard to explain, but I feel like a lot of peoples problems stem from this instability created by the state (ruling class). Idk if I'm coherent having a hard time putting my thoughts about this subject into words.

>> No.58271657
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58271657

>goes to vacation 3 weeks in early March
>come back
>2300 Gold, 26 Silver
>portfolio up 20%
I should be away more often.

>> No.58271692
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58271692

>>58271657
>vacation 3 weeks
Japan?

>> No.58271751

>>58271657
welcome back frenchbro, welcome to the second month of the bull market

>> No.58271764

>>58264960
oh thats huge news!
>>58261319
how long til were at $3500 canadian?

>> No.58271771
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58271771

>>58271692
I wish. Went to see some family members. Still good to be offscreen, help make some decision. Will use the next small top at 35 Silver to clean my portfolio, have 2-3 picks I wanna get rid, or at least lighten up a bit.

>>58271751
From what I've read, everyone is looking for this leg to top around June. Then another big one late this year ? We need to be on top of the game, no way I'm being a bagholder like 2020 this time.

>> No.58271850

>>58271771
nobody knows where the (local) top is but the last short bull in PMs lasted for four months. And the 70s/00s bulls lasted for years, which I think is a better analogue than 2016. The way I'm probably going to go about taking profits is probably taking some off after a double, investing into cheaper sectors like nickel maybe

>> No.58271869
File: 37 KB, 400x400, 7Uz2uYq.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58271869

Can we all thank that anon that sold his gold like 3 weeks ago so we can finally hit all time highs?

>> No.58271880

>>58271597
>I find it hard to explain, but I feel like a lot of peoples problems stem from this instability created by the state (ruling class). Idk if I'm coherent having a hard time putting my thoughts about this subject into words.
People certainly prefer stability and predictability over chaos. Our current system has enabled mass plundering by the state and the business class. It is definitely having an effect on people's mental stability -- a very negative effect -- and I don't think this state of affairs can go on much longer without a breakdown.

>> No.58271887
File: 143 KB, 1440x1025, 6af64d_5727730.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58271887

>>58271869
thank you retard-kun for capitulating on your 2kgs of gold

>> No.58271897

>>58271597
Also, your posts are quite coherent and understandable. I'm glad you didn't lose your marbles. I think I could withstand and broken body so long as my mind remained intact. The world of thought is what defines us as humans and, for the fully developed human, is the most important thing.

>> No.58272007

gold's cup & handle chart magic is completing as we speak, it's going up very fast now

>> No.58272329
File: 20 KB, 795x530, Flag_of_Leninsk-Kuznetsky_(Kemerovsaya_oblast).png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58272329

I like how a lump of coal is on their local flag. Not even West Virginia does that.

>> No.58272440

>VIRIDIS ENTERS JOINT VENTURE FOR SEPARATION,
REFINING AND RECYCLING OF RARE EARTHS
>Viridis and Ionic Rare Earths Execute Transformational Agreement
for the Downstream Production of Rare Earth Oxides
tl;dr Viridis and Ionic formed a separate 50/50 JV company with the intent of developing a commercial downstrem technology which can separate all 17 rare earth oxides from a rare earth precipitate. REE precipitate is the end product of a mine's process circuit and is shipped off to downstream separating facilities where currently only Nd-Pr & La-Ce, or Dy-Tb can be separated into oxides. If this tech is commercialized they could retrofit it into current downstream circuits or give rights for new sucj facilities in exchange for royalties, or they could start buying precipitate from hard rock and IAC mines primarily in Brazil (presuming such mines start operating and I think they will considering the world class IAC deposits being developed there)

>> No.58272575

>>58271880
>and I don't think this state of affairs can go on much longer without a breakdown.
On the contrary I believe it can continue for quite some time, usually when there's a change in the status quo is bad for the average guy. Although there's always a breaking point.

>> No.58272640
File: 192 KB, 1545x869, coomer.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58272640

>>58258304
>webm
LMAO that looks like so much fun

>> No.58272666
File: 992 KB, 886x728, 3456765434567878654321.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58272666

>>58272640
Imagine the smell.

>> No.58272679

>>58258304
the japs are so fucking weird

>> No.58272768

>>58272679
White folks don't season they buttholes

>> No.58273148

>>58250893
>a grand total of zero ounces
so no mining permit, no mining, no need for the ore sorter, no need for the processing facility in Idaho, sounds like a solid CMMG pick.

>> No.58273329

>>58272575
I have no idea when something will give, but it will happen eventually, given the pressure that's building up in society. And yes, the change usually hits the average person very hard, though in the long term it can be for the better.

>> No.58273511
File: 327 KB, 1600x1200, Coal, Alaskan anthracite, over 1 pound weight.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58273511

Some more gorgeous Alaska anthracite

>> No.58273565
File: 352 KB, 1600x1200, Coal, Alaskan anthracite, over 1 pound weight #2.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58273565

>>58273511
Anthracite burns very clean, almost smokeless, and so it's well suited for use as heating and cooking fuel for your home. Perhaps some homesteaders can use it.
Nowadays, in the U.S. it comes mostly from a few surface mines in Pennsylvania.

>> No.58273599

Jeff snider actually dedicated a whole Eurodollar University episode to gold, never seen that before since he hardly talks about it.

https://podcasts.apple.com/ca/podcast/eurodollar-university/id1506469669?i=1000651175957

>> No.58273807

>>58273511
look up the Klappan coal deposit in northwest BC. Its a massive Anthrocite coal bed, with a coal gas shale bed capping it. The area could have been one of BCs greatest coal mines, but its location as the headwaters of multiple native bands resulted in the area becoming off limits to industry.

>> No.58273867

>>58273807
That is such a shame. Anthracite is so useful and wonderful. But I guess it'll remain in situ until people come to their senses and decide to mine it. I am sure it won't just sit underground forever.

>> No.58273886
File: 185 KB, 720x950, Screenshot_20240402-222033_Samsung Internet.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58273886

>inorg fertizer needs phosphorous
>peak phosphorous has entered conversation
>morocco is estimated to have like 70% of world reserves
>article mentions food security

>> No.58273888

Impact taking off big time

>> No.58273909

>>58273599
let me guess he's saying it's a sign of an immediate market crash and deflationary death spiral. Like everything else.

>> No.58273954

>>58273909
He noted how gold steep rise relative to silver, platinum and palladium’s slow crawl is a sign that industrial outlook is still mixed at best, and that the reasons why gold is going up (I.e lowering real rates) do not apply to the other metals.

I’m paraphrasing and going off memory but that was one of his viewpoints.

>> No.58273976

>>58273954
Yield curve still fucked but higher than it has been. Waiting for it to spike and fuck equities

>> No.58274092

>>58273867
unfortunately with the bands involved and how were moving in this province towards native land sovereignty, such resources will stay in the ground forever, or until a new colonizer comes along.

>> No.58274115

>>58274092
>or until a new colonizer comes along.
The way it's going, a new colonizer will come along. It may take till the end of this century before the West falls that low, but we're well on the path of decline.

>> No.58274128
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]
58274128

>>58274092
Also, I just hate seeing miners lose their job. It literally pains my heart, since I've survived layoffs (before (I got into mining, like in 2008 when I was a young buck), and because mining is what's dearest to my heart, along with Christ.
May the Canadian miners prosper. All mining around the world is, to me, like a brotherhood. Not a "labor international," but some kind of brotherhood nonetheless.

>> No.58274292

>>58274092
that or the natives embrace industry and the boons it brings for the landowners

>> No.58274377

>>58274128
>Nobody's hat is on fire
Wtf

>> No.58274486
File: 249 KB, 1080x1445, Coal miner flame hat.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58274486

>>58274377
Rectified

>> No.58274490

>>58274292
The natives need to stop listening to the green freaks and do what's best for themselves. They could all be affluent from these mining projects.

>> No.58274510

>>58274292
there was a serious push in many bands to bring in major industry and make an absolute fortune off the resources that are on their territory, but unfortunately new governments with backing by outside forces have pushed back and are now openly saying the bands should revert to more "pure" cultural practices. Its a way to cheat us and them out of their own wealth.
>>58274115
China will likely end up with the resources of the west coast, and the warnings that went on deaf ears in the bands will become reality.
>>58274128
Underground mining is thriving here right now, but unfortunately as we have seen time and time again in these threads there are far to many failing projects driving the industry under. We need strong project management that can create generational work as the sector did in the last century.

>> No.58274528
File: 198 KB, 1200x1200, Sticken Johnney Miners lamp.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58274528

>>58274486
I am surprised there arent more shots out there of guys using these setups.

>> No.58274548

>>58274510
These NGO's gotta goes.

>> No.58274550

>>58274490
its not just the green freaks telling them to be anti industry anymore. There is a serious push for nationalism within some of Canada's strongest bands, to be totally separate government entities with title and control over their territory. The people pushing these ideas have strong ties to the young world leadership program by DAVOS. Its an economic trap.

>> No.58274597
File: 233 KB, 480x360, 1700408752291972.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58274597

>26.6 Silver
>still no slammy
28 next challenge. Will 2021 repeat ?

>> No.58274631

>>58274550
>The people pushing these ideas have strong ties to the young world leadership program by DAVOS. Its an economic trap.
So they're falling for the deindustrialization, anti-modernity agenda pushed by those world government control freaks?

>> No.58274652

>>58274631
bingo, their pushing the idealized "noble savage" routine again, but this time with people pulled from universities as a local leader sort of approach. They tell their bands that they need to return to how things used to be, be less materialistic while also campaigning for their original lands back in full. The Haida of Haida Gwaii on the BC coast just won such a legal battle for example, affirming their right to land title control superseding the federal government.

>> No.58275484
File: 175 KB, 1144x829, prospector and burro carrying supplies Grants pass Oregan 1903.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58275484

quick evening bump before bed.

>> No.58275644
File: 2.79 MB, 4890x3044, 1710127356052724.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58275644

>>58274528

>> No.58275980

>>58274597
Gotta close above 26 for the week first desu, it will happen

>> No.58276238

https://thecoaltrader.com/deutsche-bank-says-glencore-may-consider-switching-listing-to-us/
>Deutsche Bank Says Glencore May Consider Switching Listing to US
https://x.com/CoalNewswire/status/1775408139824763316?s=20
>Analysts suggest Glencore Plc $GLEN.LN might shift its primary listing from London to New York due to weak UK investor support for its #coal business. The US market is more receptive to fossil fuel firms & US-listed #copper stocks trade at higher premiums.

>> No.58276314

>>58276238
Predictable and well-deserved. As a Brit, we've lost the plot. Decades of demonising the only productive parts of our economy have had the expected result.

>> No.58276701
File: 77 KB, 1279x776, 17434635675467.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58276701

Coal going the way of natural gas.

>> No.58276819

>>58276314
Part and parcel

>> No.58276894

>>58276701
Some of that is likely related to their economic slow down and the cost of cheap imported coal, would be by guess. Some of it, anyways.

>> No.58276903

>>58276894
Hopefully the coal miners sell off, they're holding really strong.

>> No.58276940

https://www.cityindex.com/en-uk/news-and-analysis/us-dollar-rally-hits-headwinds-silver-squeeze-sparks-potential-bullish-break/

>> No.58277180

>>58276903
>>58276701
not the difference between thermal and met coal markets. Seaborne thermal faces fierce competition from increasing LNG supply. Met coal has no such competition

>> No.58277320
File: 176 KB, 720x1600, Screenshot_20240403-064159.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58277320

Defiance silver up 99% in one month

>> No.58277336

>>58277180
Coking coal is down quite a bit too

>> No.58277386

>>58277320
Still mega early

>> No.58277402
File: 1.26 MB, 1765x1861, GALLEON.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58277402

IT'S CLOSER TO HAPPENING

https://galleongold.com/news/galleon-gold-announces-up-to-98-gold-recoveries-from-metallurgical-studies-at-west-cache-project/

>> No.58277408

>>58277386
Yeah I'm hoping we see a pull back so I can slurp a few more things

>> No.58277421

Silver bros?

>> No.58277425

Are the rapists going to be waiting behind my hotel again today?

>> No.58277724

>>58277421
wagmi

>> No.58278096

>>58277421
yes?
also anyone have some junior tickers they can throw my way?
I already have a collection, here is my list of silver related holdings:

NFGC
BLLYF
BLAGF
AOTVF
DSVSF
SVM
SIL
SILJ
SLVP
PSLV
AG

I'm looking for more, looking to rotate fully out of PSLV as i have ample physical.
This is for a retirement account so i can't put this into physical, well I'm not willing to. I'll keep some liquidity in their system

>> No.58278207

>>58278096
>no Pan American
>no Vizsla
>no AbraSilver
>no Mag Silver

>> No.58278239

>>58278207
PAAS is a no because of jurisdiction concern,
I ignored Vizsla because its market cap is high and i haven't DYOR'd
I will lookinto all of these except Pan American, jurisdiction risk is too high.

Seriously, thanks. I've been 100% focused on crypto (idc what anyone thinks about it, its made me bank) but now its time to start looking back to commodities.
I'm not gonna be a trader, just hold till i feel Silver is cool. Then i'll start selling and move onto the next low hyped area.
love my my physical stack though.

>> No.58278294

>>58278239
The jurisdiction risk in PAAS is fully priced in desu and no value is assigned to Escobal and Navidad which are both huge silver mines on care & maintenance and which might come online if they regain social license.

>> No.58278535
File: 1.31 MB, 1476x1265, 1682905565177479.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58278535

>>58278294
based

>> No.58278573

>>58278096
HL will fly when all the normies are looking for a silver play this is where most will go and it's low jurisdictional risk

>> No.58278609

>>58278294
interesting take, to me its priced in till it happens and then share holders get left holding nothing

>>58278573
and ill look into it, but there is no doubt that most normies will pile into SILJ due to the name.
they will hear junior miners have the best growth potential, and its in the name SILverJuniors

>> No.58278628

>>58273886
Not an issue for now but an opportunity down the road.

>> No.58278663
File: 179 KB, 1543x801, ceo.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58278663

>>58277402
moving up with the news, hard to believe they got so cheap

>> No.58278772

>>58278096
Impact Silver?

>> No.58278966

$2300 today?

>> No.58279039
File: 521 KB, 771x1120, 110191b5748490a16ee1c4ed9ae2a8ba.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58279039

>>58278096
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OvRFOgBPfgQ

>> No.58279095

>>58278609
>and then share holders get left holding nothing
how would that happen?

>> No.58279230
File: 20 KB, 371x340, Capture.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58279230

Bought a big bag 2 years ago when doing DD on IPT. Average of 0.13c feelsgood, my lottery ticket in my PF

>> No.58279233

>>58279095
Peru says mines are nationalized. PAAS is now owned by the government of Peru.
Share holders now own nothing.
its happened before.

>> No.58279261

>>58264960
>>58271421
>>58271440
>>58271764
more on the Scottie deal with Franco-Nevada

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l4IFEfupRBQ

>> No.58279293

Didn't someone say we would be mooning two weeks ago?

>> No.58279301

>>58279233
LOL

>> No.58279346

>>58279301
talk.lol?

>> No.58279475
File: 293 KB, 382x663, 1634567545678.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58279475

Gold is up.
But my juniors are down.
Even though I never frown.
Eventually I will break down.

>> No.58279509

>>58277408
Dont care just bought lol

>> No.58279586

>>58279346
my nigger from another nigress, you're long Silvercrest and First Majestic which are both all in on Mexico which is the most openly anti-mining shithole in South America. You're also long Silvercorp which is all in China, enjoy the sanction risk a lá Russian stocks. Pan American is a diversified miner too btw, they're not only in Peru. Pan American has assets in Mexico, Peru, Argentina, Guatemala and Colombia. Plenty of diversification between different shitholes. And besides fearful retards have kept on droning about muh nationalization meme when I tell them I have stocks with exposure to South America, Africa and Papua New Guinea but none of those tail risks have materialized. It's the IQ test of the mining sector, local support matters much more. Governments can just stack more tax or royalties on top anyways, see what dirty trick the Ozzies did to their coal sector in Queensland last year with the royalties. No jurisdiction is truly safe from bullshit but that's no excuse to be a retard

>> No.58280090

$27 silver. I have a boner how about you?

>> No.58280104

>>58280090
I've got a windsock semi chub going

>> No.58280144
File: 205 KB, 463x839, mion2.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58280144

Came to check up after two years of not giving a shit about this sector and sounds like we're all in on the "it's happening this time" train again. Last time this happened marked the 2022 top, time to load up some shorts.

>> No.58280185

>>58280090
only a half chub

>> No.58280208

>>58280104
>>58280185
What did they mean by this...

>> No.58280218

>>58280208
OOOOHHHH WE'RE HALFWAY THEEEREEEE

WOOOOO-OOOOOHHH

LIVIN' ON A PRAYER

>> No.58280257

>>58276701
When gas goes down, coal must go down to compete. Natural gas is now coal's main competition for power generation.

>> No.58280266

>>58274652
Thanks so much for your insight, PAN MAN

>> No.58280274

>>58280257
remember that for seaborne thermal, only LNG price matters as competition.

>> No.58280303
File: 739 KB, 834x814, 17564435678765789.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58280303

So this is it? This is the big one? It's actually happening right?

>> No.58280325

>>58280303
you're a month late but yes

>> No.58280347

>>58242128
Anyone else on the junior silver miners train? I don't care to buy stock but my jun 21 options for paas, hl, and fsm are up 3.2x combined since March 13.

>> No.58280390
File: 142 KB, 960x720, Coal, anthracite Alaska 2.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58280390

Hot damn I have the luck of the Irish in investing. I cashed out my Alpha Metallurgical Resources Stock a few months ago when it was at $380, just off its ATH. So I got close to perfect timing. Then I loaded up on gold, silver, and platinum, but mostly gold and a few thousand ounces of silver.
I'll be shittin' in the high cotton!

>> No.58280397

>tourists
well fuck bros looks like slow comfy threads are over for the foreseeable future it's been fun

>> No.58280400
File: 79 KB, 369x219, 6497.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58280400

>>58280090
Not until 30 is broken, until then I'll kill every boner with my 2tb folder

>> No.58280410

Funny how the shittiest companies go up the most.

>> No.58280424

>>58280410
they also go down the most and create the most bagholders and losses. that's the way to cookie crumbles

>> No.58280459

>FED'S POWELL: I DON'T THINK INFLATION IS REVERSING HIGHER.
dear God this bullrun is going to be insane

>> No.58280589

>>58280459
>I DON'T THINK INFLATION IS REVERSING HIGHER.
Fucking faggots know exactly what they're doing.

>> No.58280624

>>58280347
yeah my fsm calls are 2 or 4x depending on the strikes. not sure why the stock spiked 11% today but im just mad im poor otherwise i would have owned so much more

>> No.58280647

>>58280624
>not sure why the stock spiked 11% today
It has the word "silver" in it's name.

>> No.58280692
File: 638 KB, 664x638, static-assets-upload9337692517933659658.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58280692

Where's my mining Chads at? What's our next move once we become millionaires?

>> No.58280699
File: 9 KB, 406x121, sctsf.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58280699

just added at .1488 which is my lucky entry price, at least a 10 bagger from here

>> No.58280744
File: 2.35 MB, 1427x1025, 176543456786546.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58280744

>>58280699
>just added at .1488
You're that kinda guy...

>> No.58280745

>>58280692
the next move is to sit tight.

>> No.58280749

>>58280692
>What's our next move once we become millionaires?
Keep at it. Let's use our collective obsession and drive to Make Mining Great Again.

>> No.58280750

>>58280647
it hasnt moved 11% before so like i said i dont know what happened. i just woke up 20 minutes ago so im trying to catch up on news

>> No.58280761
File: 2.90 MB, 200x200, 1710250632468267.gif [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58280761

>>58280692
>once we become millionaires?

>> No.58280807
File: 187 KB, 1511x2015, 1698746026017644.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58280807

>>58280692
lets not calc our gains before making them, one step at a time brother. I'll be happy if my 60k become 500k. Millionnaire would allow me to tell go fuck yourself at my manager and stop wageslaving.

>> No.58280852
File: 188 KB, 1012x1188, GKPxqxtWgAALwaD.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58280852

PMs? Bullish.
Energy? Bullish.
Copper? Bullish.
Base metals? Bullish.
Battery metals? Maybe a bit later.
Fertilizers and crops? Maybe a bit later.

>> No.58280907

So if weed is a commodity... Why aren't we discussing pot stocks?

>> No.58280961

>>58280907
We're also not discussing mineral sands, tobacco and REEs much either. But I'll happily participate in discussion. Even started some myself, not that there was a lot of interest

>> No.58281043

>>58280961
>We're also not discussing mineral sands, tobacco and REEs much either.
True. Although I'd take tobacco out of it because there's like 15 companies in the world and 5 of them control half of the industry.

>> No.58281070

>>58281043
I don't think sector consolidation is the bad part about tobacco stocks, I think the bigger issue is that the long term consumer and legal trends spell doom for those stocks at least for now. But the situation might be totally different give, ten or twelve years from now, they might be a great contrarian pick at some point. Or maybe they will begin buying out cannabis or even medical psychedelics companies idk

>> No.58281098

>>58281070
>I think the bigger issue is that the long term consumer and legal trends spell doom for those stocks at least for now.
People have smoked tobacco for millennia, I don't think it's going anywhere, and these new "nicotine vapes" are selling pretty well. But yeah isn't really a growing industry, at least in the west.

>> No.58281103

>>58247044
Post some, gay

>> No.58281147

>>58281098
It's not going anywhere but the younger generations clearly show a declining trend in customer base. At least as far as age groups go. But maybe overall population growth and e-cigs will help buoy the tobacco companies' revenues. Even then, the taxation of tobacco products keeps rising and it's becoming a higher cost for individuals whose cost of living is already increasing as-is. The longer term trends are pretty well against these companies' main business model, but then again the same is true for (thermal) coal producers and those are pretty attractive to buy so maybe the same is true for tobacco stocks

>> No.58281162

>>58281103
lurk moar fomo tourist lmao

>> No.58281184

>>58280624
Keep an eye open. In 2021 silver started going up 1 a day on spurts. My calls were doubling in a day. I was an idiot then and held to long. Lesson learned.

>> No.58281195

>>58277320
Oof

>> No.58281220

>>58281147
>taxation of tobacco products keeps rising
Yeah, I think the trend on that could reverse if the big companies start having issues because of it, they're all large political donors after all.

>> No.58281229

>>58281184
yeah very short term today's trading action was the first time I began seeing real greed in the silver stock charts. Many stocks up over 6-10% and extremely overbought. With spikes like these I could see the gains extend tomorrow but definitely not the optimal time to buy technically speaking. If I was a degenerate options gambler I would start thinking about taking risk off the table for IV and time value reasons, but I don't do drugs

>> No.58281236
File: 292 KB, 1179x851, Coal miners.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58281236

https://www.countoncoal.org/2024/04/energy-addition/

>Metallurgical coal exports from Baltimore, used for steel making, largely move to Asia with top destinations including Japan, South Korea and China. The majority of the world’s primary steel production — about 70% — uses coal-fueled blast furnaces. Last year, U.S. coal exports rose 17.7% from 2022 to 90.5 million metric tons. Of that volume, 51.4% was metallurgical coal and 48.6% was thermal coal.

>> No.58281282

>>58281162
USGO

>> No.58281334
File: 1.91 MB, 1637x749, 176543245678654345678.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58281334

>Portfolio up in one day equal to 10 days of work.
This can't last for much longer can it?

>> No.58281348
File: 106 KB, 639x374, Coal mine ram car.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58281348

>>58281236
From the same article,

>Renowned energy analyst and historian Dan Yergin recently observed that the world isn’t just using more coal than ever before but three times what it did in the 1960s. While Yergin recognizes significant changes in the global energy mix, he said, “I’m sick of the energy transition discussion. It sometimes loses touch with economic history and reality. If you look at the history of energy transitions, they all last for over a century. To try and make change happen in 25 years, or even half of that time is highly unlikely.”

>For Yergin – and energy analysts the world over – the coal age has miles to run. The International Energy Agency (IEA) expects coal consumption in India and Southeast Asia to in fact “grow significantly.”

>By 2026, the IEA expects just China and India together to account for 70% of global coal demand. Those two nations and Indonesia opened 59 gigawatts of new coal generating capacity last year. India has 85 GW of new coal generating capacity already under construction with more expected.

>> No.58281351

>>58281334
expect consolidation but no huge pullbacks unless there's a stupidly overbought runup

>> No.58281373
File: 173 KB, 720x893, Screenshot_20240403_132612_Brave.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58281373

>> No.58281377

$27
WTF
WTF
WTF
boomers what did you do

>> No.58281378
File: 105 KB, 500x468, Coal, bituminous 2.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58281378

>>58281147
>but then again the same is true for (thermal) coal producers and those are pretty attractive to buy so maybe the same is true for tobacco stocks
Yep, strangely enough, thermal coal producers have indeed been doing pretty well lately in terms of stock price. It's quite remarkable.
If US coal mining companies and US coal mining servicing companies go to Asia, if just to provide expertise -- let alone getting contracts and infrastructure in place for more exports -- then the future of US thermal coal miners could be quite secure.
This is my mission in life, to be frank. I care little about my money except as a means to basic security while I pursue the goal of safeguarding US thermal coal mining for generations to come.

>> No.58281395
File: 103 KB, 800x632, Coal mine, West Virginia 1944.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58281395

>>58281377
They bought the boomer rocks for security.
Coal is another great boomer rock.

>> No.58281425

>>58281378
I pray your crusade for coal succeeds. I know you have coal blood in your veins, it's your legacy.

>> No.58281457
File: 415 KB, 720x1158, Screenshot_20240403_133233_Brave.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58281457

You guys want to split this after we make it?
https://www.yachtworld.com/yacht/1988-cruise-ship-138-passengers----can-operate-between-us-ports----stock-no.-s2285-4870021/

>> No.58281486

>>58281395
>>58281377
the boomers haven't even done anything yet, this move is all chinks, pajeets and vatniks and their central banks buying. Just wait until a panic sets in, THAT'S when the boomer money will go to gold and silver.

>> No.58281524
File: 66 KB, 924x928, 16754678765.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58281524

>>58281457
Let's all in one of these turn it into a runway sail for the Antarctic and then use a plane to fly over the ice into unexplored lands.

>> No.58281557

>>58281524
we could form our own exploreco and discover new mineral deposits recently exposed from underneath ice sheets in the Arctic

>> No.58281571

>>58281557
Yeah if aren't offed by the powers that be, we could do that.

>> No.58281609
File: 86 KB, 924x568, DDA40X.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58281609

>>58281425
>I pray your crusade for coal succeeds. I know you have coal blood in your veins, it's your legacy.
Thank you, fren. I mean that from the heart.
I somehow got coal in my veins and in my heart despite not coming from a mining family -- though my family has always been deeply blue collar.
I fell in love with coal as a child, from my dad's interest in steam locomotives. We lived in Illinois, which used to have all kinds of excursion steam trains, due to Illinois being the rail crossroads of the country since the 1800s and having such a big legacy of railroading.
An engineer on a steam excursion train let me up, as a little boy, into the cab to throw some coal in the firebox and I was hooked. My dual loves -- for things that are of this world -- are coal and trains. After that fun event, I asked my parents for a lump of coal for Christmas and found one in my stocking that year. This was some time in the 80s.
I am an energy guy more than a steel guy. I've done the math and even at current rates of production and use, coal mining can continue for a minimum of hundreds of years just based on known reserves. Adding in as yet unknown deposits, of which there must be many, we likely have thousands of years of energy available to us in the form of coal, even at much increased rates of use.
Here is one big find offshore, and there are likely many more out there, and more deposits on land that are yet to be discovered.

>“We think there are between three trillion and 23 trillion tonnes of coal buried under the North Sea,” explained Dermot Roddy, former professor of energy at Newcastle University.

https://www.worldcoal.com/coal/31032014/coal_discovered_in_north_sea_674/

We burned about 8.5 billion tons of coal in 2023. So we literally have enough coal to last us millennia. Don't worry about a resource crisis. With enough energy, even low-density resources can be made useful, and we have the energy. Now is the time to worry about making a better world.

>> No.58281638

>>58281609
>“We think there are between three trillion and 23 trillion tonnes of coal buried under the North Sea,” explained Dermot Roddy, former professor of energy at Newcastle University
Isn't this like saying there's 100 billion oz of gold
"in space". So what if there's 23 trillion tones of coal when you can't mine it yet? Am I missing something?

>> No.58281717
File: 177 KB, 720x970, Screenshot_20240403_135610_Brave.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58281717

$2,300. WAGMI.

>> No.58281727

>>58281609
>After that fun event, I asked my parents for a lump of coal for Christmas and found one in my stocking that year.
hahah I had no idea you were this based. God bless you

>> No.58281743
File: 31 KB, 585x524, 1712108756174072.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58281743

what would be a good buy for the dividends

>> No.58281754

>>58279586
Okay thanks fellow negress, Imma ape into some PAAS when markets open tomorrow.

Also shocked that no one mentioned Dolly Varden. Any thoughts on that?

>>58280144
i don't think this is the same. There is no hype. its just isolated to the people who gravitated towards metals since 2021...

>> No.58281772

>>58281486
Even better news, then! When the boomers pile in, we can look for a much bigger rise in the fiat value of PMs.

>> No.58281791
File: 1.37 MB, 720x1280, 1704003480770856.webm [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58281791

>>58279586
>my nigger from another nigress
We wuz all nigguz 100k years ago.

>> No.58281857
File: 1.44 MB, 640x800, 1676435451378224.webm [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58281857

>>58281743
usually I don't like to spoonfeed but I'll help a dividendtard out. For energy, Exxon, Chevron and Canadian Natural are all very strong in the oil&gas producer space. In the more natgas focused space, Arc Resources and Tourmaline are sustainable divvy payers. There's also some great oil&gas royalty companies with strong margins and sustainble dividends thanks to the low cost royalty business model: Topaz Energy, Prairiesky Royalty and Freehold Royalty. For uranium there's only one and that's Kazatomprom, very cheap but possibly inaccessible to you and also political risk as it's a Kazakh state owned company (basically the Petrobras of uranium). For base metals, go with the giants: BHP, Rio Tinto, Glencore, Vale, Freeport McMoran. They pay out well over time. In the gold sector I can recommend Agnico, Barrick and the fairly unknown Endeavour Mining and B2Gold. And finally fertilizers: Nutrien and Mosaic.
>>58281754
Might be better to wait for the charts to cool down a bit, I'm not buying silver companies right now myself but will add when the technicals look better.
>Dolly Varden
will do well. They've consolidated land packages over the years and turned a single small mineral asset into two slightly bigger assets which may actually be contiguous enough to merge into one. I don't own DV but it's a decent silver name desu
>>58281791
>niggers get to fuck pic related
maybe I should buy a few silver coins for the meme. If you know you know

>> No.58281884
File: 1.51 MB, 256x320, 1681240264433251.gif [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58281884

>>58281857
thank you anon

>> No.58281891
File: 23 KB, 112x112, 1710105078061485.gif [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58281891

>>58281857
>maybe I should buy a few silver coins for the meme. If you know you know
Get a few, someone has to bleach all the nigguz when SHTF.

>> No.58281957

>>58281857
Whachu think about UUUU

>> No.58281959
File: 332 KB, 339x385, macrone5.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58281959

>+30k in 2 weeks
>still not feeling euphoric
I'll sell the top and there is nothing you can do about it, not being a bagholder again.

>> No.58281971

>>58281857
Wow imagine the AIDS. Mmmm, she look like a whole lotta STD.

>> No.58281989

>>58281957
more of a downstream rare earths processing company if memory serves me right, but the market treats them like a uranium stock anyways. Not a fan myself but as I understand it has had a bit of a cult status on *****t and smg

>> No.58281991

>>58281638
That coal is mineable since it's only under a shallow nearby sea. Old Cornish miners in the medieval period used to mine undersea deposits of metals (tin, copper), by digging a shaft on nearby ground, a shaft that goes beneath the shallow sea, and then mining outward to the mineral deposit. It's not revolutionary technology. It's centuries old.

>> No.58281992
File: 938 KB, 314x240, 1709567729116788.gif [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58281992

>>58281959
>again

>> No.58281999
File: 110 KB, 1024x955, Jesus 2.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58281999

>>58281727
>>After that fun event, I asked my parents for a lump of coal for Christmas and found one in my stocking that year.
>hahah I had no idea you were this based. God bless you
Got bless you too, fren

>> No.58282000

>>58281992
Everyone has to learn the hard way brother, not being shy about my mistakes. Proud of my scars.

>> No.58282001

>>58281991
>it's only under a shallow nearby sea
Ohh, mb I though it was like miles underwater.

>> No.58282009
File: 111 KB, 1080x604, Screenshot_20240403_232333.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58282009

Rate my poorfolio performance
Its like 95% cmmg

>> No.58282013

>>58281999
*God
:)

>> No.58282015
File: 478 KB, 748x766, 174356788678.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58282015

>>58282000
Just pulling your leg brother.

>> No.58282021

>>58281959
>>58282000
A wise man may make mistakes, but won't repeat them. WAGMI

>> No.58282036

>>58282000
>Everyone has to learn the hard way brother, not being shy about my mistakes. Proud of my scars.
Same
My young adulthood was all kinds of messed up, but I am doing better now.

>>58282001
The North Sea is shallow.

>> No.58282037

>>58282009
I rate it five waters out of one glass of whiskey

>> No.58282071

>>58282036
>The North Sea is shallow
Average depth looks to be 95m seems quite deep for a mining operation.

>> No.58282096

>>58281857
> wait till technicals look better
ehh im a crypto tard, my portfolio is up 800% this year and im just looking for security, I don't give a fuck about overpaying 10%
silver is going for $29-30 in shanghi right now and with where we are I'd rather just get my portfolio settled
im only selling based off the vibes i read.
when the people who i shilled silver to for the past 3 years start telling me they actually bought 1 oz then I will sell some of my miners.

>> No.58282098

did the kike jerome speak today? what was the catalyst for todays move in metals?

>> No.58282123

>>58282098
Some anon posted, he apparently said "I'm not worried about inflation".

>> No.58282149

>>58282036
>For the most part, the sea lies on the European continental shelf with a mean depth of 90 metres (300 ft). The only exception is the Norwegian trench, which extends parallel to the Norwegian shoreline from Oslo to an area north of Bergen.[1] It is between 20 and 30 kilometres (12 and 19 mi) wide and has a maximum depth of 725 metres (2,379 ft).

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/North_Sea

Could easily mine below 300 feet, even below 2300 feet if needed.

>> No.58282160

>>58282071
300 feet is nothing. Some gold mines reach 4000 meters of thereabout. Some coal miner are 1300 meters deep.

>> No.58282170

>>58282149
>Could easily mine below 300 feet, even below 2300 feet if needed.
Really? How does one go about mining 90m under water?

>> No.58282174

>>58282096
understandable enjoy the ride. btc looks bearish btw

>> No.58282185

>>58282160
You've spiked my interest. How does this work?

>> No.58282260

>>58282185
I'm not a shaft driller, so I don't know the details, but there are dedicated shaft drilling companies that can dig you a mine thousands of feet deep if needed.
In the old days it was just pick and shovel and workings to take the removed earth to the soil. Now they use heavy machinery and, I would assume, blasting.

>> No.58282267

>>58281959
Just how big is your pf frenchbro
30k is my entire stock pf right now

>> No.58282275

>>58282260
Have you ever seen a shaft on the seabed? Maybe a very veeeery long ramp could work but that would be extremely expensive

>> No.58282290
File: 457 KB, 845x925, 1647644001363.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58282290

>>58282267
Ive put 70k in juniorr miner (all under 60 market cap) and 12k in silver coins. Aiming big.

>> No.58282307

>>58282290
>12k in silver coins.
Isn't there VAT on silver in France?

>> No.58282308

>>58282290
How much is your pf value right now? Or how much do your stonks need to go up before you break even if I may ask? I've seen a lot of people saying they're still deep in the red and I think that's omega bullish. As for me I have managed to stay in the green with active trading in different commodity sectors, and my stock pf is currently valued at about US$60k. But I don't have nearly as much leverage as you since I don't own a lot of microcaps

>> No.58282350

Oh man I missed out on buying more PM miners
Just last week I was thinking of putting most of my savings into miners
They're all past the covid lows and I can only transfer 2500€ at a time FUCK

>> No.58282368
File: 132 KB, 1085x947, silver_M_old.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58282368

>>58282307
20% yes, thats why I didnt go even more on physical. Gold coin are better, that's what I intend to buy when cashing miner. I bought my silver when it was pretty low.

>>58282308
Down 18% right now, was down big time but everything doubled thse last few weeks, big catch up. Tiny junior erase your loss extremely fast when you don't pay attention. It wasn't an exageration when Horseman said being down 50% in junior was nothing.

>> No.58282395

>>58282368
Fucking VAT man. I refuse to buy silver because of it, doesn't seem worth it to me even though it won't matter once they're done inflating the currencies.

>> No.58282398

>>58282350
you were a month late but you're still early. The awareness phase is still not here quite yet, some people are noticing but it's been a rather muted and uninterested reaction from the general public.
>>58282368
alright good to know thanks.
>coins
I actually sold my very first investment, 100oz of silver in October of 2022 and in the same bullion dealer bought gold instead. Silver was going sideways and gold was at about $1,750 or something so I managed to time the gold bottom while taking home some tax loss on the silver. I decided that I'll just have bullion for long term wealth preservation and that I'll speculate on silver with the miners. One of my wisest investment decisions if I may say myself

>> No.58282427

>>58282395
Bought most of mine around 17-18€, 20% hurt but I was looking for all leverage I could my hand on. Also governement pay way more attention to people hoarding gold than silver, you can keep your head low when heat come for us.

>>58282350
Stop complaining, PM are at ATH and miner are only doing catchup. Yes, they went up a lot, but they're still below where they should be, not even talking about what they have to do once the catchup is done.

>>58282398
Yeah, very wise, physical shouldn't be seen as investment honestly. I'm just keeping them in case we really do get the 600$+ silver meme. I'll buy Gold coin from now on.

>> No.58282455

>>58282427
If the gold silver ratio drops to a low enough level it might be smart to do a swap. Bit of an annoying position to be holding silver when gold is making new highs but we know silver is bipolar and likes doing Usain Bolt 100m dashes when catching up to gold

>> No.58282460

>>58280807
This is shopped, right?

>> No.58282512

>>58282174
youre right, i actually own zero btc out of principle.
its digital gold, and i mean it in the most derogatory way. No (almost no) utility or worth, im not saying anything against gold. but gold is valuable and desired because of its physical properties..
Meanwhile,
There are tokens that you can buy that represent actual ownership in a network that produces value, rights to revenue, voting power, and also native purchases for the service the network provides.
there are many of these, and yet the masses fall for this bullshit narrative of muh BTC.
Personally, I think it was a way for them to position themselves better before the fiat crash, and lean into it potentially transitioning to another fiat system, but balance is needed with monetary metals, and gets easier to enforce when the world moves further from a reasonable equilibrium

>> No.58282536

>>58282512
Thanks for the thoughts. I'm fairly clueless on crypto since it's simply not my cuppa you know? I like to stay in my lane which for now is commodities only.

By the by, here's an interesting fact which positively boggles the mind: the world's second largest gold mining company by market cap (and I think also by production but it's closely tied with Barrick), Agnico Eagle, has a LOWER market cap than dogecoin. Absolutely insane valuations for both the gold equities as well as internet meme tokens.

>> No.58282537

i fell for blue lagoon and bay horse silver back i nthe day. what are you fags shilling this time?

>> No.58282557

>>58282537
>he fell for it
ironically enough you will probably still end up making a lot of money in this bullrun if you're still holding those shitcos

>> No.58282568

>>58282557
its not a loss if i dont sell

>> No.58282586

>>58254478
keep us updated anon, i like what i’m hearing

>> No.58282614

>>58254478
Rig counts usually correlate with o&g prices afaik. In bull markets companies are incentivized by higher prices to drill more, and in bear markets they drill less.

>> No.58282707

>>58282537
I'm still hodling those and fully TRUST THE PLAN

>> No.58282867

>>58282275
They could just drill straight down on land, a bit inland, and then mine out to the minerals under the shallow sea. I don't think that would be so much more expensive than many existing mines.

>> No.58282879
File: 152 KB, 900x900, 2024 Armenian silver coin.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58282879

>>58282290
May fortune smile upon you, anon.

>> No.58282888

>>58282867
I suppose it would depend on the distance from shore to the subsea deposit. The length of the ramp would be the key variable in this equation

>> No.58282941

>>58282888
Indeed it would be, but some amazing feats of engineering have been accomplished to get at underground and even underwater mineral deposits. I am sure that if the energy return is big and juicy enough, it can be done. We don't need that North Sea coal right now, having plenty of inland supplies, but we already have the tech to access it in the future.

>> No.58282955

Anyone wanna bake?

>> No.58282956
File: 35 KB, 973x177, GRAEME-RANA.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58282956

>>58282537
TRUST THE PLAN
>>58282707
BASED

Captcha: KY

>> No.58282974

>>58282956
>>58282537
>>58282707
DO NOT REDEEM THE SHARES SERS

>> No.58282992

New bake

>>58282984

>>58282984

>>58282984

>> No.58283638 [DELETED] 
File: 357 KB, 2048x1152, 435350186_1036054094697634_8924688151427473978_n.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
58283638

>>58282537
Benton Resources

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