• Introduces topic: sustained Shanghai silver premium vs. Western benchmarks isn't closing via normal arbitrage, suggesting market structure issues.
    Jeremy Saffron
  • David Morgan
    Confirms the premium is due to localized strain, capital controls, and shipping costs. Arbitrage isn't fully happening despite the spread.
  • Asks why silver shows this tension but gold does not, if it's a broader monetary shift.
    Jeremy Saffron
  • David Morgan
    Explains structural differences: COMEX sets price via derivatives, LBMA is a physical club, Shanghai is for industrial users.
  • David Morgan
    This time is different: China's big demand is for COMEX-style 1000-oz bars, causing the physical market to take over price discovery.
  • Asks about the physical impact of a 43-ton weekly drawdown from Shanghai vaults.
    Jeremy Saffron
  • David Morgan
    Low inventories cause users to bid up price to secure supply, tightening the market and shifting control to the physical side.
  • Asks how to distinguish a tightening trend from normal vault rotation.
    Jeremy Saffron
  • David Morgan
    Most COMEX deliveries are 'retagging' between banks; real stress is seen when metal leaves the exchange. Shanghai data is hard to get but suggests current stress.
  • Asks about the functional role of banks in COMEX: market makers or directional traders?
    Jeremy Saffron
  • David Morgan
    Banks control the market through leveraged physical metal but are not as massively naked short as often claimed. They dislike risk.
  • Asks if banks suppress price or facilitate flow, and who benefits in a physical squeeze.
    Jeremy Saffron
  • David Morgan
    You can't manipulate the long-term trend, but you can manage price within it (e.g., in thin trading). The January correction was normal market activity, not necessarily manipulation.
  • Asks if CME's percentage-based margin hikes act as a natural break on rallies.
    Jeremy Saffron
  • David Morgan
    Yes, margin hikes protect the exchange and everyone. Higher margins force out weak, leveraged players, moving the market toward a cash-only structure.
  • Asks if a cash-only market would cause a price spike or drop first.
    Jeremy Saffron
  • David Morgan
    Would probably drop initially as speculative capital exits, then level off, then rise steadily based on true physical demand from industry and investment.
  • Asks if Shanghai's stricter position limits (hedging quotas) make it less speculative than COMEX.
    Jeremy Saffron
  • David Morgan
    Yes, Shanghai is more aggressive. COMEX open interest is inflated by commercials rolling positions. Real stress is in Shanghai physical demand.
  • Asks what would disprove the 'regulatory squeeze' thesis if March 1st passes without change.
    Jeremy Saffron
  • David Morgan
    Thesis wouldn't lose credibility. Professionals (industry) care about ounces, not just price rules. Still expects higher prices; we are in the final phase of the bull market.
  • Asks about impact of high prices on industrial demand and substitution.
    Jeremy Saffron
  • David Morgan
    High prices are already affecting solar industry (silver is 40% of panel cost). Markets are efficient long-term; substitution (e.g., graphene) is possible but not imminent.
  • Asks about India's massive ETF inflows and if it permanently removes metal.
    Jeremy Saffron
  • David Morgan
    ETF accumulation is reversible but has a significant effect. Creates a 'double whammy' with industrial reserve building and increased investor access.
  • Asks when fiscal structure outweighs short-term macro noise for metals.
    Jeremy Saffron
  • David Morgan
    Eventually, physical demand truth wins. Government data is skewed toward inflationary bias to debase currency and manage debt.
  • David Morgan
    We are at 'the end game' - a currency reset or new system is coming, possibly involving CBDCs/stablecoins to create demand for Treasuries before a loss of trust in dollars.
  • David Morgan
    Outlook: Watch Shanghai premium, recycling rates, and sentiment. Expects trading range (e.g., $75-$85), then a move back toward $100, proving physical demand strength. We are in the final, violent phase of the bull market.
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