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- From Suppression to Management: The Telltale Sign the Silver Bull Has Won
From Suppression to Management: The Telltale Sign the Silver Bull Has Won
When suppression in silver turns into “management,” it’s an admission that the battle has shifted from control to damage limitation—the goal is no longer to break price, but to slow belief.
When suppression in silver turns into “management,” it’s an admission that the battle has shifted from control to damage limitation—the goal is no longer to break price, but to slow belief.
By that point the price controllers are leaning on psychology, not leverage, trying to stretch time, induce fatigue, and create the illusion that upside is capped even as fundamentals deteriorate beneath the surface.

Last Friday’s price action was a quiet tell.
Despite repeated attempts, they couldn’t force silver back under $90, and that matters because it signals paper pressure failing against real demand, tighter physical availability, and buyers stepping in faster than expected.
From here the game usually becomes volatility theater rather than outright suppression.
Look for sharp intraday flushes that fail quickly, engineered pullbacks around options and margin deadlines, sudden bearish headlines timed to price weakness, and a steady drumbeat of “this is the top” narratives that appear precisely when structure says otherwise.
What really gives it away is when sell-offs stop working.
Lower prices don’t accelerate downside anymore—they attract buyers, shorten drawdowns, and produce higher lows that force the managers to retreat again and again.
If you want a clean framework for recognizing when markets move from control into inevitability, it’s laid out step-by-step in 👉 The Armstrong Economic Code
And yes—the scandal release is getting very close: the book is nearly ready for publication, and the complaint is already done.