SilverEye wrote:We only need a few months worth of "money" in the event of a paper currency collapse. Remember that SHTF doesn't mean retirement for those with a few hundred ounces of silver. It means we personally become a micro-community bank with this new hard money, lending tiny amounts to our immediate neighbors, until trade resumes normally. We keep working like before, earning enough to feed and clothe and house ourselves and our families. Our paychecks just change from bits in a computer to literally ounces and fractionals of gold and silver.
Of course, more is better. I'm stacking until I'm retired, then I'm selling to help fund my retirement.
Saabman wrote:I've been thinking about this question for awhile now and maybe this is the appropriate place to ask, but.....how much is enough? Meaning, if it does go down like some on here believe, is a months worth of pay, at today's prices, of Pm's enough to see one through? A years worth? Just curious as to what everyone has in mind.
Mossy wrote:300 ounces Ag at $30 / oz, that's only $9000. $50 is a more reasonable value for physical (blasted paper manipulators), but that's still only $15,000.
Pocket change, if things get seriously wrong.
68Camaro wrote:Mossy wrote:300 ounces Ag at $30 / oz, that's only $9000. $50 is a more reasonable value for physical (blasted paper manipulators), but that's still only $15,000.
Pocket change, if things get seriously wrong.
Correct, but the bulk of the US has negative savings, no matter how the measure, so anyone that actually has savings period is well ahead of the crowd.
As savings (retirement) I would use a rough rule of thumb of an allocation of an ounce of silver per day per person for as many days as you think you need to cover. For a couple, that's a need of 700 oz per year. For ten years, that's 7000 oz. Or an ounce of gold per month per person. Give or take.
If we're lucky we might see a real appreciation in the value of silver that would make the amount needed go down to half or a third of the above. But the general yardstick remains useful.
68Camaro wrote: ...
Correct, but the bulk of the US has negative savings, no matter how the measure, so anyone that actually has savings period is well ahead of the crowd.
Mossy wrote:68Camaro wrote: ...
Correct, but the bulk of the US has negative savings, no matter how the measure, so anyone that actually has savings period is well ahead of the crowd.
Being ahead of the crowd can still be mighty bad off.
shinnosuke wrote:We should also think about the jewelry boxes with a few of their "treasures." I know 14k resale/usage may be tough in a stink HTF scenario though it's better than nothing. Adding in the rings and necklaces will bring the percentages up some.
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