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Top Stocks To Buy Now? 2 Silver Stocks In Focus
Here are two silver stocks to check out for your mid-September 2022 watch list.
The post Top Stocks To Buy Now? 2 Silver Stocks In Focus appeared first…

Silver stocks refer to the equity securities of companies that mine, process, or fabricate silver. They are considered a precious metal stock since silver is classified as a precious metal. Investors often like investing in silver stocks because they offer exposure to an asset class that may not be well represented in their portfolio. In addition, silver stocks also tend to be more volatile than other types of stocks. As a result, the volatility can provide opportunities for investors who are looking for capital appreciation. Notably, some of the more popular names among silver stocks are companies like; Wheaton Precious Metals (NYSE: WPM), iShares Silver Trust (NYSEARCA: SLV), and MAG Silver Corp (NYSEAMERICAN: MAG) just to name a few.
However, it is important to be aware of the risks associated with investing in silver stocks. For example, silver stocks may be more susceptible to economic downturns. As demand for silver tends to be driven by industrial activity. In addition, silver prices can be impacted by changes in currency values and global supply and demand. As with any investment decision, it is important to do your research before investing in silver stocks. With this in mind, here are two trending silver stocks to watch in the stock market now.
Silver Stocks To Watch In The Stock Market Today
- Pan American Silver Corp (NASDAQ: PAAS)
- First Majestic Silver Corp. (NYSE: AG)
Pan American Silver Corp (PAAS Stock)
Kicking off the list, Pan American Silver Corp (PAAS) is a Canadian-based precious metal mining company. The company has operations in Mexico, Peru, Bolivia, and Argentina. For a sense of scale, the company is currently the world’s fourth largest primary silver producer by market cap. Currently, PAAS has a market cap of $3.25 billion.
PAAS Recent Stock News
In August, Pan American Silver announced its financial results for the second quarter of 2022. Diving in, the company posted a loss of $0.03 per share, along with revenue for the quarter of $340.5 million. In addition, in the second quarter of 2022, Pan American Silver reported it produced 4.5 million ounces of silver.
Michael Steinmann, President, and CEO commented in the company’s release to shareholders, “Operations at our flagship asset, La Colorada, has improved significantly, with silver production rising to approximately 1.7 million ounces in Q2. However, Pan American’s Q2 results were markedly impacted by the underperformance at Dolores and our determination that recording an impairment of this asset was required. The remaining operations performed largely in line with our expectations, recovering well from the impact of the COVID-19 Omicron wave in the first quarter of 2022.“
PAAS Stock Chart
In 2022 so far, shares of Pan American Silver Corp stock are down 34.24% as of Tuesday’s late-afternoon trading session at $15.99 per share. At these price levels, PAAS stock is trading 47.67% from its 52-week high of $30.56 per share. Now, do you think now is a good time to add PAAS stock to your list of silver stocks to watch right now?

[Read More] Good Stocks To Invest In Now? 4 Blue Chip Stocks To Buy According To Analysts
First Majestic Silver Corp (AG Stock)
Next up, First Majestic Silver Corp (AG Stock) is a Canadian mining company that specializes in the production of silver. For starters, First Majestic is the largest primary silver producer in Mexico and one of the leading silver companies in the world. First Majestic’s operations are located in the Mexican states of Jalisco, Durango, and Sinaloa. Its projects include La Encantada Silver Mine, La Parrilla Silver Mine & La Luz Silver Project.
AG Recent Stock News
Last month, the company announced its Q2 2022 financial results, as well as declared its quarterly dividend payment. Getting straight to it, First Majestic Silver posted a second-quarter 2022 loss of $0.02 per share and revenue of $159.4 million. This represents a 3% increase in revenue compared to the same period, in 2021. What’s more, the company reported total production of 7.7 million silver equivalent ounces. Moving along from that, the company’s Board of Directors declared a cash dividend payment of $0.0061 per common share for shareholders in Q2 2022.
Furthermore, Keith Neumeyer, President, and CEO at First Majestic Silver said this about the quarter, “Throughout the second quarter, the silver price continued to experience significant volatility, declining approximately 20% from $25 to $20.As a result of this weakness, the Company refocused and successfully reduced its 2022 capital investments without impacting its strong growth in projected production. In Mexico, our three operations generated healthy profit margins as approximately 80% of our total production came in at a low AISC cost of $15.34 per ounce.“
AG Stock Chart
So far this year, AG stock has dropped by 30% as of Tuesday’s power hour trading session. The stock is currently trading at $7.61 per share. Currently, First Majestic Silver is trading 48.12% from its 52-week high of $14.67 per share. With all that being said, could now be a good time to buy AG stock at these price levels?

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“The Face Of The Digital Censorship Movement”: Matt Taibbi Calls Out Amy Klobuchar
"The Face Of The Digital Censorship Movement": Matt Taibbi Calls Out Amy Klobuchar
Authored by Matt Taibbi via Racket News,
If you read this…

Authored by Matt Taibbi via Racket News,
If you read this morning’s Racket article about Senator Amy Klobuchar’s letter to Jeff Bezos asking for “proactive measures” to suppress sites like Substack or Rumble, you probably gathered I’m in a mood.
I’ve had it.
Whether it’s NewsGuard slapping “anti-US” labels on Joe Lauria and Consortium News, or Drs. Jay Bhattacharya, Aaron Kheriaty, and Martin Kulldorff censored on multiple platforms for being right on Covid, or podcaster Alison Morrow fired from a state job for interviewing Kheriaty, or friend CJ Hopkins in Germany criminally convicted for a book cover, or the FBI asking Twitter to remove Aaron Mate for the Ukrainian Secret Police, or ballooning budget requests of “counter-disinformation” enforcement agencies, or the new jailing even of Owen Shroyer for having “helped create January 6th” with speech, or of course the forever-detention of Julian Assange, and above all the total indifference of legacy media to all of it, it’s over. I’ve lost patience. Time for a more focused approach.
A problem when grappling with the censorship hydra is that it has no public face, no Tipper Gore or Jerry Falwell to personify the topic. Klobuchar, for reasons listed this morning and beyond, is right for this role. She needs to be Red Pencil Amy, Blacklist Amy, Amy “Thought Police” Klobuchar. And longshot or not, removal of her from office in next year’s election or even from Senate leadership positions is a worthwhile goal. The rest of Washington needs to read public sentiment about this issue through a colleague’s public relations dilemma.
I’ve already got a lot on my plate, but I’ll make Klobuchar a personal branding project, even if it takes time. I’ll write up any move she makes in this direction, or not in this direction. Her lesser-known partner in the bid to make Amazon a “verified sources only” zone, congressman Joseph Morelle of the Rochester, New York area, can be thrown in. Think of Morelle as the VP half of the censorship movement’s ticket. It’s nothing personal. At earlier times this person could have been anyone from Rick Stengel to Adam Schiff (especially him) or Mark Warner. Klobuchar and Morelle just picked the wrong time in my personal downward spiral to pull this stunt.
T-shirting, postering, meming ideas very welcome.
Incidentally, I’m still planning town halls on the speech subject, and in fact have one confirmed at my old college in the third week of November. (Details to come). Willing to do more if anyone can help on the venue side. Although perhaps these events would be best held in Minnesota now.
For readers who might be concerned I’m losing my mind, you’re not wrong. What can I say? Even my dog flashes worried looks at me these days. But I was pushed. Pushed I say! And so were many, many others. A la bataille!
International
‘I see no happy ending’ − a former national security leader on the Gaza hostage situation
No government wants to have to deal with a hostage crisis. A former US national security official explains that there is no winning without losing in such…

Hamas took more than 200 people hostage during its deadly rampage in Israeli border towns on Oct. 7, 2023. Among the hostages are children and the elderly. While four of them have been released, the fate of the rest is unknown, as Qatar serves as an intermediary in working to free the hostages. In this interview with Naomi Schalit, The Conversation U.S. senior politics and democracy editor, Gregory F. Treverton of USC Dornsife, a former chairman of the National Intelligence Council in the Obama administration, says most hostage-taking has specific goals. This one, says Treverton, “is basically an adjunct of warfare, and that makes it very different” – and very hard to solve.
How do people in your field think about hostage-taking? I would imagine that the feeling is, “Oh, my god, please let nothing like that happen.”
It’s an utter dilemma, because on the one hand you feel for the hostages. And as we’ve seen in the past, the Israelis have been prepared to – and did – release a thousand hostages to get one Israeli back.
On the other hand, when you do a deal to get hostages released, you’re only encouraging more hostage-taking. So you’re damned if you do and damned if you don’t. As a result, every government, including the United States, says, “We never deal with hostage-takers.” But of course, they all do – and they have to.
I think it’s one of the hardest parts of being in the national security business. You want to free the people – but you’re also going to get criticized. Every time President Biden has gotten somebody out of Russia, people have said, “Oh, he’s paid too high a price” or “He’s rewarded hostage-taking,” and to some extent, that’s true. You are basically rewarding the hostage-takers. But we still have to deal with them. We want to get our people out. And at some some point – as the Israelis have shown – they’re prepared to pay almost any price to get them back.

Israel released more than 1,000 prisoners in 2011 in exchange for Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit, whom Hamas captured and held for five years. This is more than 200 times the number of hostages, so how do you even think about that?
At least in my professional experience, this is without precedent. The closest parallel would be the 1976 Entebbe hijacking and hostage-taking by two Germans and two Palestinians on a flight from Tel Aviv to Paris. Hijackers held 103 Israeli hostages, once they released the 148 non-Israeli hostages. Hamas holds twice the number of hostages, and in very, very different circumstances. In Entebbe, the Israeli government knew where they were, they were in a single place – the airplane – which had been forced to land in Entebbe, Uganda, after taking off from Tel Aviv. And that’s where Israeli commandos were able to rescue the hostages.
In Gaza, we don’t know where they are. We know for sure they’re scattered throughout the tunnels, likely in lots of different small groups. Hamas will presumably then use them as shields if fighting begins on the ground. They might think that that would encourage the Israelis not to make a major attack – to keep Hamas from killing all the hostages. We know that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu isn’t keen on a major ground assault, and this really puts the onus on the Israelis for how the hostage situation ends.
When you think about the history of hostage negotiations, do you see something that has any relevance to what’s going on now?
It seems to me it’s a really different category. Even Entebbe was hostage-taking for some political aim – the hijackers wanted Israel to release a large number of prisoners who were Palestinian. A colleague of mine used to say that the point of terrorism was to do the least amount of violence with the most people watching it. But Entebbe was political theater, basically, and this is not political theater. This is basically an adjunct of warfare, and that makes it very different. It’s not the usual kind of tit for tat, with “How much am I willing to pay?” or “Can I take a hostage to get somebody else out?”

What does Israel’s heavy bombing of Gaza and the beginning of a ground invasion tell you about the government’s approach to the hostage situation?
It suggests either that they have a pretty good fix on where the hostages are located, which seems unlikely given the network of Hamas tunnels, or that they have decided they must proceed in any case and will try their best to safeguard and free hostages as they go. Given the Hamas practice of using civilians as human shields, the outcome is likely to be very ugly.
Where do you see this going?
I see no happy ending. I don’t think there’s a deal that Israel could conceivably make, given its own politics. Or that Hamas would accept. So it does seem to me that at some point there is going to be that ground attack and the hostages are going to be caught in the middle of it. I see almost no alternative, given what Israel has pledged – to destroy Hamas. The Biden administration maintains that Israel doesn’t really have a strategy. They have a desire, which is to destroy Hamas. But that’s not a strategy for dealing with the hostages or for Gaza after the attack.
Gregory F. Treverton does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.
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Hamas Delegation Arrives In Moscow As Russia Blames US For Escalation
Hamas Delegation Arrives In Moscow As Russia Blames US For Escalation
In a somewhat unexpected development, a delegation of Hamas leaders…

In a somewhat unexpected development, a delegation of Hamas leaders have arrived in Moscow for talks, the Russian Foreign Ministry has confirmed Thursday evening (local time). "I can confirm that representatives of the [Hamas] Palestinian movement are visiting Moscow,” Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said in a press briefing, vowing to provide relevant details as the talks unfold.
The visit had not been previously announced by either side, and the Hamas delegation is being led by a senior member of the group, Moussa Abu Marzouk. Hamas is a designated terror organization in the US, European Union, and some other countries; but it has official relations with countries like Iran, Turkey, Syria, and now apparently Russia.
Russia, however, has said it remains willing to talk to all sides of the conflict in hopes of achieving ceasefire and peace. After the US exit from Afghanistan, Moscow had similarly hosted a Taliban delegation.
It's as yet unclear whether Russia's top diplomat, Sergei Lavrov, will meet with the Hamas representatives, given he's said to currently be in Minsk.
RIA Novosti has reported that Hamas has during opening meetings with Russian officials "commended Putin’s position and the efforts of Russia’s diplomacy."
The Kremlin has said it is engaged in crisis diplomacy talks with both the Hamas and Israeli sides, at a moment that over 220 hostages are still being held in Gaza. Four have been released thus far, including two Americans, due in large part to the mediation of Qatar. Will Russia press the delegation to release more captives? Likely this is high on the agenda for Moscow.
Just days ago Russia blamed the United States for stoking escalation by positioning Navy warships in the Mediterranean near Israel. FM Lavrov said Monday during a meeting in Tehran that "the more a state takes this kind of proactive measures, the greater the risk and the danger of an escalation of the conflict".
He called out Washington as "already among the countries intervening the most" since the October 7 Hamas terror attack. The Biden administration as of course rejected the charge, and blamed Iran for ultimately being behind Hamas and regional terror.
At the UN in New York, Russia and China have also just vetoed US drafted UN Security Council resolution on Gaza. The dueling sides have rejected the proposals of the other given Washington's pro-Israel stance, and the willingness of Moscow and Beijing to heap criticism on Tel Aviv for the humanitarian crisis and soaring death toll among Palestinians.
Turkey has also been a foremost critic of Israel's assault on Gaza, as the death toll surpasses 7,000 - with President Erdogan blasting the West's double standard on the crisis.
A #Hamas delegation met with #Russia's Deputy Foreign Minister today in Moscow pic.twitter.com/ENlKWK1it3
— Michael A. Horowitz (@michaelh992) October 26, 2023
He said in his most recent speech at a Thursday conference, "Is it possible not to react while seeing what happens in Gaza? Nothing justifies such savagery. Unfortunately, so-called 'civilized' countries watch it. We heard that the EU is still hesitating to call for a cease-fire. How many children should die before you decide on a call? Let us know when the cease-fire should be declared. I have been in politics for 40 years, but I never sat idly in the face of such savagery,” Erdoğan said.
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