Deise Doll
Registered User
- Messages
- 18
Silver remains even more undervalued than gold. It traded at $50/oz in 1980 (over $130/oz adjusted for inflation) and is trading at just over $18 per ounce today.
Nonsense.
I absolutely disagree with this logic.
What makes you think silver is undervalued today because of the 1980 price?
Did you ever consider that it was in fact overvalued back then and todays price is the right price?
Or even if it was the correct price for it back then, circumstances have since changed. That doesn't mean it is the right price for it now !
I am not saying gold / silver won't go higher. But certainly not for the logic you offer above.
If we were to follow that logic then we shoudl all be piling back into property given that it must obviously be undervalued now based on the price it was a couple of years ago !
Silver's historic price ($50 in 1980 versus $18 today) is just one of the reasons that you should invest a small amount in it (nodody suggested piling in).
Not being a seasoned investor I have some reservations about all the talk of buying Gold.
Would I be right in saying:-
As the dollar drops gold rises!
As it seems that you have to buy and sell gold in dollars, you then have the problem when selling, of converting your fallen dollars back into euros plus your expenses in euros. Is it worth the exercise??
No, gold is commonly quoted in US$, but is traded in every currency.There're many factors that effect the price of gold:
1. Dollar value (you're quite right about it). As gold price is in dollars, the value of the greenback affects the price of gold.
Absolutely right, but what has been seen in the last 12 months is that it dramatically increased even with an apparent "recovery". Either there is no recovery, or the market believes that if there is a recovery, then prices are set to go up because of all the inflation created by central banks.2. Gold is considered to be a safe heaven, just like a savings account, thus gloomy economics news will most like push the price of gold higher.
Gold is a bit more than just another commodity; it is money, which puts into a category of where it is unique in that it is not used up through consumption. You are absolutely right that it's price is dictated by supply and demand.3. Gold is just another commodity... the price depends on demand and supply.
True, but the same goes for cash in a bank account, or shares held at a broker, or anything else stored by someone else.
While this may be true for some gold investment vehicles, it certainly isn't true for all. The Perth Mint and GoldMoney are two very well audited companies.Its not the same. Gold paper, or silver paper trades are heavily manipulated to control the price of both. There have been more gold and silver paper receipts sold, than there is physically in existence.
Can you give some examples other than some media hearsay, i.e. some actual auditing results?If delivery of all the trades in pm,s were called for, then there will be an awful lot of people ending up with no metals. There have been many instances of customers being charged for storage, where no metal is held by the company.
No, that is utter fiction! I think you need to seriously reassess the credibility of that website. The contributors fail to understand the most basic thing about futures contracts and economics:Having a receipt for any of the precious metals , means nothing. Posession is everything.Gold and silver have been oversold by 100 to 1. thats 100 ounces of paper , to 1 ounce of physical. Fact.
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[a] sells the bar to who sells it to [c] ... etc, till you have sold the bar 100 times.
Nothing wrong with that.
Now have a delivery date in the future, but all those sales already agreed today.
Anyone looking at the 'market' today would see 100 sales, but only one underlying bar of gold.
And do you think that if all depositors and creditors went to the banks and demanded their money, that the state would actually be able to cover this? The only thing interesting about the guarantee is that it is a terrible piece of legislation.With regards to money held in banks ect, you would do well to read exactly what the government guarantee for bank deposits is. It makes interesting reading .
sabre
...............At best you can hope for 10% being held in reserve.
It's not so much a trick but rather government enforced fraud.The old fractional reserve banking trick.
As I already said, some precious metal investment vehicles are dubious (at best), like some mutual funds, EFTs, etc, but certainly not all! I am personally very confident in the audit reports of the Perth Mint, GoldMoney and BullionVault. Of course I will never know unless I were to personally inspect it, but that is beside the point.Let me ask you 2 simple questions.
Do you believe that all of the electronic gold and silver trade receipts match all of the gold and silver physical.
If all of the receipt holders looked for delivery, would they receive their physical metals.
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Intreresting article here on India's attitude to gold. It's often depicted as just an obsession with jewelry, but its roots are much deeper than that.In Asia and Dubai etc people view gold jewerlly differently to us in Europe.. they buy heavy gold chains etc, as an investment, where they are paying primarily for the gold content, not fabrication charges. So in Dubai you can buy 1 ounce gold chains, which contain an ounce of gold, and you only pay a slight premium over the spot price of gold, for a machine made chain. This seems quite good.
Yup, I agree!BullionVault don't sell paper gold, they sell physical gold and mind it for you. No tricks or sleight of hand.. the gold is there, and it's yours... not theirs. If they go bust the gold doesn't appear on their balance sheet, and the liquidator will ensure that everyone gets their entitlement.. no creditors have any claim on the gold, as it's not on the company books, and is subject to an age old, legally simple and secure, bailment arrangement... (i.e you are paying BV to mind your gold, they have no claim on it.)
There are exceptions to their insurance, for example, a James Bond nuclear bomb in the vault type scenario could see you lose your gold... similar to a massive earthquake or volcano, which could wipe out your hidden stash in the back garden.
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