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100. That's the number of delivery notices JP Morgan just issued against themselves in a single day. Not 10. Not 25. One hundred physical silver delivery demands — 500,000 ounces of metal that somebody inside that institution wants moved from paper to physical possession. This sat buried inside a COMEX report that maybe 200 people on the planet actually read. While you were scrolling headlines about inflation cooling, JP Morgan was quietly pulling metal off the registered pile. This is publicly available CME depository data — daily issuance and stops reports, warehouse statistics, registered vs eligible breakdowns. It's all there. The financial media will never mention it because delivery data doesn't fit in a headline. They're counting on you to never download the PDF. But I downloaded it. And in this video, I walk you through: – The exact filing: CME Metal Depository Statistics and what "stopped" actually means – 100 contracts × 5,000 ounces = 500,000 ounces demanded in one session – Registered vs Eligible: Why only 79 million of 335 million ounces are actually deliverable – The paper-to-physical ratio: 575 million ounces in open interest vs 79 million registered — 7.3 paper claims per physical ounce – JP Morgan's 18-month behavioral shift: From issuer (supplying metal) to stopper (taking metal) – The 2020 settlement: $920 million for spoofing in precious metals from 2008-2016 – Why accumulation by a major bank changes the supply equation – The counterarguments: Client orders, eligible conversion, data noise — and what they don't explain – My 5-point framework for tracking delivery data like a professional – Why price is the distraction while physical metal moves in the background When the largest bullion bank in the Western financial system shifts from supplying metal to demanding metal, they're not doing it for storage fees. They ran the math. They see something. The question isn't what's the silver price today. The question is: what do they see that you don't? ⏱️ Timestamps: 0:00 – 100 notices: The number that should bother you 0:45 – How most people consume silver information 1:30 – The frame: Not panic, not dismissal — structure 2:15 – The primary document: CME Metal Depository Statistics 3:00 – 100 contracts = 500,000 ounces demanded 3:45 – Registered vs Eligible: The warehouse structure explained 4:45 – The paper-to-physical ratio: 7.3 to 1 5:30 – JP Morgan's 18-month behavioral shift 6:30 – The 2020 settlement: $920 million in context 7:30 – The counterarguments — and what they can't explain 8:30 – My 5-point delivery tracking framework 9:30 – Metal Moves: Reading the signals ⚠️ DISCLAIMER This video is financial education and document analysis, not financial advice. I am not a licensed financial advisor. All investments carry risk. Silver is volatile. The analysis presented is based on publicly available CME depository statistics, COMEX delivery reports, CFTC enforcement records, and Commitments of Traders data — verify everything yourself. Delivery data interpretation does not guarantee price direction. Institutional behavior observation does not prove future intent. Past enforcement actions do not prove current misconduct. Do not over-leverage. Position accordingly. Your decisions are your responsibility. HASHTAGS #Silver #JPMorgan #COMEX #SilverDelivery #MoneyUntold #PreciousMetals #SilverPrice #PhysicalSilver #CME #SilverManipulation #DeliveryNotices #RegisteredSilver #EligibleSilver #SilverVault #Spoofing #CFTC #SilverNews #SilverAnalysis #BullionBanks #SilverFutures #WallStreet #OpenInterest #SilverInvesting #MetalDelivery #WarehouseData #SilverSqueeze #PaperSilver #PhysicalDelivery #SilverMarket #Commodities #FinancialEducation #SilverInvestor #COTReport #SilverTrading