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Royal Canadian Mint starts rationing silver coins | Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee

Royal Canadian Mint starts rationing silver coins | Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee | Gold and What Moves it. | Scoop.it

Dear Friend of GATA and Gold:

 

Jason Hamlin of Gold Stock Bull reports that, following the U.S. Mint, the Royal Canadian Mint has begun rationing its silver coin production:

 

http://www.goldstockbull.com/articles/royal-canadian-mint-hits-supply-sh...

 

It's not that silver isn't available. It seems to be that the mints don't want to buy the metal necessary to meet coin demand, lest they allow the price of silver to be pushed up to jeopardize the government-backstopped price suppression scheme.

 

CHRIS POWELL, Secretary/Treasurer
Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee Inc.

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Charles Hugh Smith: Why the Innovation Premium Is Diminishing

Charles Hugh Smith: Why the Innovation Premium Is Diminishing | Gold and What Moves it. | Scoop.it

The acceleration of competition as high-tech tools and skills have dispersed throughout the global economy is an under-appreciated trend.


In the late 1980s, Apple famously reaped $1,000 in gross profit on each Macintosh computer sold: Apple was able to charge a very high premium for the innovations the Mac embodied. (Note: this was back when $1,000 was a substantial sum; that is over $2,000 in 2012 dollars.) This ability to reap a substantial premium for innovation is fundamentally what drives the technology marketplace: since competition arises in any high-profit space, the premium for innovation degrades as competitors enter the space. In the good old days, it took years for serious competition to arise. As the bumper sticker crowed, "Windows 95 = Mac 1985." (As I worked with both Mac 1985 and the crash-prone Windows 95, I would say Win95 was still substantially behind the Mac in stability.) The acceleration of competition as high-tech tools and skills have dispersed throughout the global economy is an under-appreciated trend. Apple has earned billions of dollars in profits over the decades as its innovations enabled the ...
Hal's insight:

This is an interesting article. Will make you think.

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