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JUST IN: COMEX COUNTED SILVER IT DOESN’T OWN… SHANGHAI JUST SET THE RANSOM PRICE Silver investors… the West has spent years treating COMEX vault reports like a comfort blanket, counting metal it doesn’t own as if it were its own – and now that accounting trick is colliding with a hard Shanghai floor and an 11‑day delivery clock the paper market cannot escape. In this video, we walk through what I call the Shanghai ransom – and why it matters more than any single red candle on your app: Registered vs eligible: how COMEX headlines brag about roughly 380+ million ounces in vaults, but only around 98 million ounces are truly “registered” and deliverable, while the larger “eligible” pile is privately owned metal that cannot legally be touched unless its owners choose to sell – yet TV pundits keep adding both piles together as if the exchange controls them all 5:1 paper leverage into March: recent warehouse and open‑interest data show about 98 million ounces of registered silver against roughly 400–430 million ounces equivalent in March futures claims, implying that if even a fraction of longs stand for delivery into the February 27 first‑notice day, COMEX is structurally short tens of millions of ounces before a single bar moves The accelerating drain: in early 2026, registered stocks slipped below the 100‑million‑ounce “red line”, with one COMEX report logging a single‑day negative adjustment of more than 3.2 million ounces in registered and several more million ounces leaving the eligible category – a pattern of metal quietly exiting the system even as paper trading volume stays huge Shanghai’s hard floor: FX‑adjusted spreads and independent trackers show Chinese silver trading at a persistent double‑digit dollar premium over Western prices, with recent episodes where Shanghai futures sat around the equivalent of $25–26 higher per ounce than COMEX – a sign that industrial buyers in China are willing to pay much more for guaranteed metal now, effectively setting a ransom floor under the global price that Western banks cannot push through indefinitely When paper meets empty vaults: reports out of Shenzhen’s Shuibei hub describe how a major leveraged metals platform collapsed under “pre‑pricing” promises as gold and silver spiked, leaving tens of thousands of investors and over 10 billion yuan in unpaid claims, police on site, and confidence shattered – a small‑scale preview of what happens when too many paper claims chase too little physical If you’ve been told that “COMEX has plenty of silver” or that a cash‑settled force majeure can magically erase a physical shortfall, this breakdown shows a different picture: a fractional‑reserve paper system leaning on metal it doesn’t control, a Chinese market that already pays a structural premium for real bars, and a delivery deadline where those two worlds are on a collision course. ⚠️ DISCLAIMER This video is for educational and entertainment purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or trading advice. Silver and related assets are volatile and can result in significant losses, especially around delivery periods and structural stress. Always do your own research and consult a licensed financial professional before making any investment decisions.