by natsb88 » Mon Feb 25, 2013 6:41 pm
We're really talking about three different businesses here.
Gold/silver buying - Run a storefront operation and/or mobile buying events (the kind of things Realcenters love to hate) to purchase coins, bullion, scrap gold/silver jewelry, etc. from the public. Assemble those goods into large lots and sell them to a refiner. There are several members here that have physical coin shops and scrap buying can be a big part of that business, if not the business entirely. You will need some basic testing equipment, you will need to register or obtain a license depending on the state and local laws, you will need a lot of practice and knowledge, you will need a storefront or a mobile operation, and you will need a pretty good chunk of change for buying. State/local laws may require you to hold items for 30 days (or more) before sending them to a refiner, and Patriot Act and anti-money laundering laws will require you to collect and store a bunch of information about people who sell to you. Some municipalities have additional reporting requirements (like sending reports/pictures to the police department) to try to catch stolen goods. Generally if you buy something stolen, you forfeit it to the police and are out your money. In addition to floating inventory for a holding period, you will also need enough purchasing power to be able to accumulate several ounces of gold and a couple hundred ounces of silver before shipping it off to a refiner if you want to get the best payout rates. You would have to evaluate the area you want to work in; are there existing coin shops, jewelry shops, or gold-buying shops that would present competition? If not, it could mean you wouldn't have any competition, or it could mean that others have tried but there is not enough material in that area to sustain a business.
Refining - Processing scrap gold into 9999 fine gold and scrap silver into 999 silver (generally speaking). It involves lots of equipment, lots of potentially dangerous chemicals, lots of melting, lots of testing, lots of knowledge. It's a high-volume low-margin business. It does not scale down well. At least not as a profitable business. There is lots of existing competition paying very high rates already and it would take a lot of capital to get started.
Somewhere in between those two would be what Nickelmeister mentioned, a melt and assay shop. Basically melting down scrap lots and using an assay process to determine the exact composition. You can then sell the assayed bar to a refiner at a better rate than just sending in bags of loose scrap jewelry.
Minting - Taking 999 silver/gold in bulk/raw forms and converting it into finished products. Standard weights, hallmarks, etc. This can be as much of an art as it is a business. You have to develop products people want and you have to market them effectively. You have to source material, manage production, advertise your products, and take and ship orders. Poured and stamped products involve furnaces, molds, post-processing like polishing, marking with custom stamps, etc. You can get set up for a few thousand or less, but there is a limited market for high-premium low-volume and relatively unknown products. You'll spend a lot of time and money establishing a recognizable brand. If you want to get into actual minting, like making rounds and bars, you'll need a coining press. Take a look on eBay. On the low end, well-used old stuff is going to run at least $20,000 plus the cost of upkeep and inevitable repairs. A nice shiny new press will be $50,000 - $60,000 on the low end. Then you'll need custom dies for each design. If you want to make your own blanks and recycle your rejects, you'll need a furnace to melt it down, a way to cast it into long bars, a rolling mill to roll it to the correct thickness, a punch press to knock out blanks, a rimming machine to raise the edge and apply reeding, a tumbler/polisher to get the desired surface finish...lots and lots of equipment meaning lots and lots of capital. And after all that, if you try to charge more than $1 - $3 per bar/round over your raw material cost, people will scoff at the "premium" and go somewhere else. There is lots of existing competition (GSM, NWT, AOCS, QSB, Silvertowne, Sunshine, just to name a few) in the minting market.
None of these are something you can get into overnight on a sustainable living wage scale without a lot of existing capital to work with or some significant financial backing. It is much more realistic to work a steady job and begin to build up a side business that you could eventually turn into a full time venture. I have been dealing in metals for five years, started acquiring equipment to make my own stuff two years ago, and just started releasing my own products in the last couple of weeks. And I still do not yet make enough from all of that for it to be my only source of income.