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Gold should not be viewed as an investment, but as an insurance policy. Gold purchased 10 years ago would have doubled in prices. That's little more than 7% interest. Gold purchaed in the early 80s and sold in the mid 90's would show a decline of over 50%. Again, it should be viewed as insurance. You should have at least 10% of your investable assets in gold.

Owning gold will protect you in times of severe inflation, depression, recession, declining dollar, war and turmoil or the end of the world as we know it. It is at these times that the worthlessness of the dollar becomes apparent and people see the value of gold.

I prefer the hard shiny kind rather than ETFs or certificates because, after all, you're preparing for the unknown. In an emergency, you don't know what will happen to the institutions holding those vehicles, but you will know about the gold you have stashed away. In an emergency where financial institutions are off-line and the dollar is distrusted, folks will trade goods and services for the shiny stuff.

Do not buy "rare" gold coins. Instead buy Bullion. Bullion comes in coins and bars. Bullion sells for the price of gold + a small premium for minting. Bullion coins are generally more expensive than bars because they have the backing of the govt. that produced them, are easily identifyable and are harder to counterfeit as well. Either is good.

American Eagles and Krugerands are 22Kt and weigh 33.9 grams per ounce.
Bars, Austrailian Kangaroos and Canadian Maple Leafs are 24Kt and weigh 31.1 gram per ounce.
Either contains an ounce of gold. The 22kt kind contains a bit of copper as well for hardness.

Buy a gram scale to verify the weight of your bullion. You can find these on ebay for ~ $10.

Store it safely and keep it quiet. With recent bank mergers, safety deposit boxes have been subject to "disappearance" and many people have lost their contents. Beware.

Never sell your gold for anything but cash as you may find the IRS looking for their cut.

Good luck.

2007-01-05 06:16:55 · answer #1 · answered by Salami and Orange Juice 5 · 0 0

Gold is a volatile investment. However over time the average return is less than inflation. So as with most "safe" investments, you don't make much and inflation eats what you do make along with your principal as applied to real money.

2007-01-04 01:37:29 · answer #2 · answered by Sun and Sand 3 · 0 0

You can buy any kind of Gold in physical if you want, but you ll have a real storage cost.
Some institutions offer one stop shopping solutions, where you can buy it and store them in their safe.

I would advice that you buy a fund replicating the return of a lot of different gold qualities or shapes. You can take a direct exposure to the ounce through financial instruments, like a future (risky for you) or a Exhange Traded Fund.

2007-01-04 00:34:50 · answer #3 · answered by GregHM 2 · 0 0

People insist on using safe where the word does not belong. Gold volatile. Should be headed up but does not fit the term safe. IAU the gold etf better than physically owning the gold but will also be volatile. You are not looking for safe. You are looking to make money.

2007-01-04 01:12:11 · answer #4 · answered by vegas_iwish 5 · 0 0

Bullion is a extra direct investment. the fee of bullion is straight away appropriate to the marketplace fee in line with ounce of gold on international exchanges (the $/oz..fee you examine interior the newspaper and see on television). Numismatic gold fee is heavily weighted on the historic and cultural fee of the article itself. additionally, call for and liquidity for such products is extremely variable. commonly that could be a lot extra easy to purchase numismatic products from sellers at or above "marketplace fee" than that is to resell them everywhere close to marketplace fee (marketplace fee being the fee of the gold plus the cultural/historic fee). opportunities are high in case you "make investments" in numismatic gold, you will pay a severe top classification and not have the skill to get well that top classification upon resale.

2016-12-15 15:25:33 · answer #5 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

If you want to take custody try a site called bulliondirect.com, that lets you buy it auction style & will either ship to you on demand or will hold for you in thier vault for free. I have used them for a couple of years now & do like them. They have gold, silver, platinum, paladium, & numismatic coins also. Either that or try ebay, but they will kill you with shipping & you wont have a large profit spread, if any. The other option is EFTs.

2007-01-04 03:08:56 · answer #6 · answered by ricks 5 · 0 0

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http://investing.sitesled.com/

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Good Luck and Best Wishes!

2007-01-04 00:45:38 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

http://www.monex.com/expert/index.html

2007-01-04 00:38:15 · answer #8 · answered by b 4 · 1 0

No.

2007-01-04 10:16:38 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

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