Posted on 07/11/2011 9:20:25 AM PDT by Kaslin
When considering the purchase of gold and silver its important to understand why youre buying it, because that will influence what you purchase. The most typical reasons people consider buying gold and silver fall into three basic categories.
- Business uses: As a hedge against inflation and counter-weight to cash investments such as bonds and money market funds.
- As a crisis currency: So when things finally collapse you have something to trade for supplies.
- As an investment: This would be mainly collectible coins with numismatic value.
To help choose between those options, you have ask yourself whether in a time of crisis the government might seize your gold?
The reason thats important is there are regulations on the books that preserve the governments right to come and get your gold if the circumstances are extreme enough and collectible coins with numismatic value are exempt from seizure. If youre worried about that possibility, then collectible coins are the way to go.
Collecting and trading coins with numismatic value are a hobby for many and a living for a few that can take years to learn. If youre leaning toward collectibles, then talk to someone with years in the business.
Otherwise, investment grade gold, silver and fractional coins or bars for business uses are what youre interested in learning about.
Physical Delivery or 3rd Party Storage?
I tend to back physical possession over 3rd party storage. Lets look at the reality of physical storage. When people think of buying gold, they think of scenes in the movies with huge 25 pound gold bars stacked on pallets. The reality for you will be somewhat different. Even if you were going to buy $50,000 worth of gold, which is a lot for most people, at $1,500 an ounce thats a maximum 33.33 ounces, or just over two pounds. Even if you spent $150,000, the gold will weigh somewhere under 6.25 pounds. Not that difficult to transport, secure or conceal.
The downside to physical possession is the risk of loss or theft, but, with proper precautions, its no more dangerous than keeping cash on hand.
The Purchase Premium
Like everyone else, your gold and silver vendor has to make a living. They make their living on the premium between the spot price and the price above that you pay to buy gold, and the price below when you sell it. Your goal as a gold buyer is to minimize the spread on both sides of the spot price.
What About Gold Jewelry?
Gold jewelry is a whole different animal. Jewelry is rarely made from investment grade precious metals. Its frequently mixed with other metals and when selling for them for the gold content, you will be paying a very steep premium. Expect the disconnect between the spot price and what you get for gold jewelry to be very wide.
Know Your Buyer
You can buy or sell gold at a variety of local merchants, but be very cautious when you see those sign spinners out on the street. Its rare a pawn shop will give you anything close to the spot price, even for investment quality precious metals. It might take a bit of legwork to find the most reliable gold and silver dealers in your area.
I prefer to deal by mail with established gold and silver dealers that specialize in the trade, like National Gold Group, but might also include companies like AMPEX. Reputable dealers will carry a variety of gold and silver investment options and plainly state the premium youre paying above the spot price.
Another general rule is youll pay a higher premium for gold and silver coins and fractional coins than you will for silver rounds or gold bars. With coins you have to stay clear on the difference between collectibles and investment grade coins. You will pay a significantly higher premium for collectible coins.
What To Buy?
When we get to actually what to buy there are so many options, this is where youll need to pick up the phone to one of the friendly customer reps at your gold dealer. All I can do is offer general guidelines.
When buying precious metals for business use or crisis currency, the goal is to buy fractional products recognized by anyone in the business with an eye toward minimizing the premium on the spot price. Very few people can afford, or would want to carry, a 400 oz gold bar (thats 25 pounds, $600,000 worth), or try to buy groceries with it.
As An Inflation Hedge
For a hypothetical $10,000 investment as an inflation hedge, Id put two-thirds in silver coins or 1 oz silver rounds and roughly one-third in fractional coin like British Sovereigns, French 20 Francs, quarter oz. American Eagles, Krugerrands, Austrian 100 Coronas or Mexican 50 Pesos. Whatever you can get the best deal on the day youre buying.
You can also opt for fractional gold bars. For those Id stick with a well known name like Credit Suisse. Personally, I wouldnt bother with anything smaller than 5 gram gold bars, too easy to lose.
As Crisis Currency
A hypothetical $10,000 for crisis currency, Id go a little heavier on fractional sizes of both gold and silver, because its going to be tough for vendors to make change.
Consider putting half in U.S. 90 percent silver coins and 1 oz silver rounds. Put the rest in either fractional gold coins or fractional gold bars and go heavier on the smaller sizes. The goal is to maximize their trading value as currency.
Trevor Gerszt, President and COO of National Gold Group, recommends as a currency hedge, common date-mixed denomination Liberty gold coins. The $20 American Double Eagle, the original American Gold Eagle, $5 Gold Liberty, the $2.5 Liberty and the Morgan silver dollar. This way you have gold and silver coins that have already been used once before in our country as currency, says Gerszt. Coins for large and small purchases, gold coins that are exempt from the Gold Confiscation Act of 1933, and they do have semi-numismatic value but the premiums are not as high as numismatic coins because they are common date gold coins, which means the coins were minted in a year with a large quantity of coins being minted.
Chris Poindexter, Senior Writer, National Gold Group, Inc
“Im interested in junk silver coin (pre-1964). Any good suggestions on where to purchase? Im thinking bags of quarters or half dollars would be the best.”
If you can afford to invest in a full bag $1000 face value, WWW.tulving.com is a good source. If you cannot afford that much then look at www.providentmetals.com for smaller bags.
You have FReepmail,
plus, don’t worry about the denominations of the coins.
All the pre-65 silver coins are fine,
just remember that 65+ kennedy halves are only 40%.
thanks....also just found this: http://bullion.nwtmint.com/silver_bags.php
Looks like they’ve been around a while........
Go to a Coin Club that has auctions. Silver dollars and halves are frequently on the auction these days and going for the silver value most of the time.
Bags may be found at Coin Conventions generally at good prices.
The State Quarter series is over.
The Territory Quarter series is over.
The State Park Series is on and the coins are rare.
The way Jefferson is facing changed on the nickel in 2005.
2009 Nickels are rare.
Memorial Cents are over. A Lincoln series was done in 2009, but the Shield cents took off in 2010.
The Presidential dollar series is still continuing.
Congress has prodded the mint to produce more coins as most new coins are not being seen.
Just FYI.
Before buying any expensive rare gold or silver coins, please have them checked. I cannot stress this enough.
Any high grade rare silver or gold coins should be graded and Slabbed professionally. A scratch ding or fingerprint tarnish can drop the value considerably. Protect your coins and keep them in Safety Deposit boxes or a safe location offsite.
They may be pretty, but thieves think they are pretty too.
“a bubble in gold and silver”
When have gold and silver ever been in a bubble???
bookmark for later
Here’s the real inflation rate without the fudged government CPI numbers.
http://www.shadowstats.com/alternate_data/inflation-charts
Aside from that the value of gold is based entirely on psychology and psychiatry and not on economics or physics. The stuff is basically worth a fraction of what it's traded for.
It’s always about perception, rather than reality.
If you ever realize that you might be dangerous.
M3 was a poor guage to measure money supply inflation since it included large deposits like CD’s and is no longer officially used. Any decline may simply be showing a shift to money market and savings accounts. The more liquid M2 is the bigger concern and is showing a steep increase, money that’s actually hitting the streets when peope use cash or bankcards.
And wait until we get even more FED involvement in buying bonds as investor demand dries up.
May be hitting somebody’s streets but it ain’t ours, QE1 money went to banks where it still sits and QE2 money apparently all went overseas.
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