balz wrote:ardorlan wrote:best way to keep your silver safe is not to show it to anyone, and to not talk about it.
Do you trust the guys at Kitco which have your address and know what you bought?
I'm not sure how it works in the US, but in Canada we have to prove our identity and address to buy any PM and they keep that in a record...
fansubs_ca wrote:balz wrote:ardorlan wrote:best way to keep your silver safe is not to show it to anyone, and to not talk about it.
Do you trust the guys at Kitco which have your address and know what you bought?
I'm not sure how it works in the US, but in Canada we have to prove our identity and address to buy any PM and they keep that in a record...
This is a bit late for you since you already made the purchase but...
The purchases I've made from Kitco were all with a PO Box so their records would show that
rather than a physical address. Though in my case I used the PO Box because I already
had it for other reasons anyways and I find it more convienient to pick up packages at the
Post Office. (The PO Box also prevents mail order companies from "accidentally" using
UPS, not really an issue with Kitco but handy when I'm getting something from the U.S.,
avoids nasty "brokerage fee" suprises. ^_-)
After your next move of course Kitco will then have an obsolete address. Setting up a
PO Box before your next move will give you a way to keep your next address confidential.
Also since you'll be giving the Post Office your home address at the current address so even
they won't have the new one after you move. ^_^ So as long as you keep that PO Box
up you've got a private drop off point. To keep the full loop of privacy I recomend also
changing your credit card billing adresses to your PO Box so you don't have to give out
any other address when you use them.
The only time Kitco really needs proof of anything is if you want to change your address
on a pool account. That's such an involved pain though if you have a pool account I
recommend just cashing it out well before you leave the old address. You can always
set up a new account after the move if you want. Setting up a new one is far less
hassle than changing an address. The info they gather with CC when you order is just
for their security locking in the order so they don't end up writing a pile of free call
options unintentionally. ^_- If your CC billing address is your PO Box that's all Kitco
needs to take your order, the key is matching the CC billing address, not nesseccarily
where you live.
The likelyhood of a "leak" at Kitco is pretty slim but you can take the steps above if
you want to safegaurd against that on future orders.
As far as storing what you've already got I don't have any recomendations beyond what
the others have given except make sure you damn well remember where you put it and
if you hide it in something else develop a habit of thinking before you chuck stuff. I've
read 2 stories over the years about people throwing out the thing they hid their valuables
in by accident because they forgot that's where it was. I don't know how people do that
but somehow it happens. -_-
justj2k78 wrote:It's easy to put it into the wooden floor. It will come with 2 (or more, I suppose) large lag bolts. You'll predrill into the floor, pound in one of those plastic whichamacallits, then place your safe over the hole and ratchet down the bolts. No problem.
Sheikh_yer_Bu'Tay wrote:I don't think apartments are a good place to hide PM's. Girlfriends come and go. Half of all wives come and go. Loose lips can get you killed in this "hobby". I don't trust banks either, but your situation could warrant a safety deposit box.
If I lived in an apartment and had several ozt of gold... I would put a few coins in a small clothe bag tied tightly shut. Then, I would tie a string onto the bag. Then I would un-screw an electrical wall socket near the floor and lower my gold coins down to lie on the floor inside the wall. Tie the string to the inside of the wall socket box so no one can see it. Then put the electrical socket and cover plate back into the wall so it looks like it did before I hid gold in it. And for crying out loud, do this in a wall where both sides of the wall are inside your apartment!
Repeat the process as many times as needed to hide all coins.
balz wrote:theo wrote:A lot of good points made here.
1. Never keep anything valuable in your bedroom. However, you can "hide" coins/jewelry (in your sock drawer for example) that look more valuable than they are.
2. A good safe is great, but if its not well hidden it will advertise the presence of valuables.
3. Spread your stash out. It would take a thief a minimum of an hour to find even half of my meager stash. Think of creative hiding places, a large vase with flowers, an old tool box etc. If you use a lot of hiding places write them down somewhere secure.
4. Consider putting some coins in a private storage unit with a lot of your other junk.
5. Be observant. How hard is it case your home? Do you have a regular schedule? Be especially careful when buying at a coin shop. How hard are you to follow?
If you spread your PMs everywhere, what will you do in case of a fire?
theo wrote:Good question. I tend to think that theft is somewhat more likely than fire. In my experience most fires are avoidable and many of the rest occur in older homes with substandard wiring. Since protecting valuables against fire tends to make them more vulnerable to theft, I've chosen to focus my efforts on making sure the fire doesn't occur in the first place. Another reason that theft is a higher risk is that silver/gold damaged in a fire will still retain a percentage of its value; stolen coins are almost always a 100% loss.
balz wrote:You made a good point theo.
I don't know anyone who actually had a fire, but is it possible to reach for the melted silver/gold in the house very fast, I mean before too many firemen goes there and take it? That may sound like a silly question, but if it's not worth the effort to protect against fire, this would be much easier. But for that statement to be true, one has to be sure he can reach for his PM (or what's left) after the fire...
balz wrote:Sheikh_yer_Bu'Tay wrote:I don't think apartments are a good place to hide PM's. Girlfriends come and go. Half of all wives come and go. Loose lips can get you killed in this "hobby". I don't trust banks either, but your situation could warrant a safety deposit box.
If I lived in an apartment and had several ozt of gold... I would put a few coins in a small clothe bag tied tightly shut. Then, I would tie a string onto the bag. Then I would un-screw an electrical wall socket near the floor and lower my gold coins down to lie on the floor inside the wall. Tie the string to the inside of the wall socket box so no one can see it. Then put the electrical socket and cover plate back into the wall so it looks like it did before I hid gold in it. And for crying out loud, do this in a wall where both sides of the wall are inside your apartment!
Repeat the process as many times as needed to hide all coins.
I thought about this. This is why I think I'll buy gold in the future rather than silver. I believe silver will outperform gold in the next years, but it takes may more space for the same value than gold. At some point, someone could have 10,000$ worth of gold on himself, but try to do this with silver... you'll feel heavy!
I'll try to keep my capital. I hope I can buy some land someday... would make things easier... But now seems like a very bad time to buy anything because the bubble is still bursting...
balz wrote:Thanks for the tips. I don't know how it works when they ship to you as I always bought in person. If they ship to you, you don't need to prove your address, am I right? When buying in person, you need an ID with the address on it, so this is not very practical for a PO box.
cesariojpn wrote:Keep them in a trash bag. Oh, wait....
balz wrote:How do you keep your silver safe?
Apartment dwellers, if you are not on the ground floor here's something to think about. If there is a large fire, your stash could end up in the guy's apartment below you. Damn gravity. This would cause quite an issue. Now you have to prove your stash is indeed YOUR stash and not the guy living below you....
Aqualung48 wrote: Supposedly there was one million ounces of Saudi gold in the WTC that got buried in the rubble. Never heard anything about whether it was recovered or returned to the Saudi's. Not that it would hurt them to loose it, the way the rape us over oil prices, but it did, in theory, belong to them. Anyone ever hear anything about this or the recovery of the gold?
I live in a house now couldn't be happier. Just have to make sure to have homeowners if your a owner and no association is there to back you.
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