$75 Silver Is FAKE⎪China Is Paying $89
In 1968, the price of gold was $35 an ounce. That was the official number. The number printed in newspapers. The number quoted by governments. But behind closed doors, central banks were paying $42. Then $44. Then they stopped quoting prices altogether.
Within three years, the official price didn't exist anymore. Gold exploded to $850.
That was a 2,300% revaluation — not because gold changed, but because the lie finally broke.
Now look at silver.
The COMEX says $32. Maybe $34. That's what you see on your screen. That's the "official" price.
But there are reports from Shanghai. From Dubai. From refiners who actually deliver physical metal. And those reports tell a very different story.
China is paying $89.
Not for paper. Not for promises. For real silver, delivered in hand.
If the official price is real, why is the world's largest buyer paying nearly triple?
What do they know that you don't?
Every morning, millions of investors check the silver price. They see a number — $32, $34, maybe $36 on a good day. They believe that number is real. They believe it represents what silver is actually worth.
It doesn't.
The price you see is set on the COMEX — a futures exchange in New York where paper contracts trade back and forth, thousands of times a day. But here's the problem: For every ounce of physical silver that actually exists in COMEX vaults, there are over 300 ounces worth of paper claims.
Think about that. 300 claims. One ounce.
This is not price discovery. This is a game of musical chairs — and most players don't realize the music is about to stop.
The physical market and the paper market have become two completely different worlds. In one world, traders shuffle contracts and algorithms set prices in milliseconds. In the other world, refiners, industrials, and sovereign nations are scrambling to secure real metal — and they're paying whatever it takes.
This has happened before.
Between 1961 and 1968, Western central banks ran something called the London Gold Pool. The goal was simple: Keep gold's price fixed at $35, no matter what. They sold real gold to suppress the price. They issued statements saying everything was fine.
But behind the scenes, the price was already diverging. Private buyers were paying premiums. Demand was overwhelming supply. The gap between the "official" price and the "real" price grew wider every month.
In March 1968, the London Gold Pool collapsed in a single weekend. The free market price immediately jumped 25% — and that was just the beginning.
The pattern is identical. The instrument is different. And this time, the divergence is even larger.In Shanghai, they don't trade paper promises. They trade metal.
The Shanghai Gold Exchange operates on a fundamentally different principle than Western markets. When you buy silver in Shanghai, you take delivery. Real silver. Real vaults. Real weight in your hands.
And when you actually want the metal — not a contract, not a derivative, not a promise — you discover something disturbing: The price is not $32.
Reports from refiners, bullion dealers, and industrial sources have revealed a staggering gap. For immediate physical delivery of large quantities, Chinese buyers are paying $89 to $92 per ounce. Some reports suggest even higher for guaranteed purity and rapid settlement.
Why would anyone pay nearly triple the "spot price"?
Because they understand something Western investors don't: The spot price is a fiction. It's the price of paper. And paper is not silver.
China has been accumulating silver at an extraordinary pace. Between 2020 and 2024, Chinese silver imports surged to record levels — not just for jewelry, not just for investment, but for industry. Solar panels. Electronics. Electric vehicles. Military applications. China is building the infrastructure of the future, and silver is irreplaceable.
Here's what makes this alarming: China isn't complaining about the price. They're not demanding COMEX reform. They're not filing regulatory complaints.
They're just buying. Quietly. Relentlessly. At whatever price the physical market demands.
This is the behavior of a nation that knows the official price is temporary. A nation positioning itself for what comes next.
When the London Gold Pool collapsed in 1968, the countries that had accumulated physical gold at suppressed prices became wealthier overnight. The countries that trusted the official price — that held paper claims instead of metal — watched their wealth evaporate.
China has studied this history. They wrote research papers on it. Their central bank advisors have cited the London Gold Pool explicitly.
They know exactly what they're doing.
The question is: Do you?
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