beauanderos wrote:For me, the answer is silver fractionals, the smaller the better.
Z00 wrote:beauanderos wrote:For me, the answer is silver fractionals, the smaller the better.
That is basically what I said.
I keep hoping that someone will develop a US brand version of a snap apart bar like Valcambi.
The cost of minting the bars and rounds is pretty much predicated on the stamping unit measure. Once the dies are made, it cost's a 100 times less per stamping to produce a 100 gram snap apart bar than 100 individual 1 gram units.
Z00 wrote:Yeah, make it an RC project. You buy the used coin press, MH can make the planchets, now we need a die maker and a design team.
GO FOR IT!!
EDIT:
Make it a 30 gram unit (3x10) so that the pricing will approximate a 1oz bar and will be different from the 50 and 100 gram Valcambi units.
beauanderos wrote:For me, the answer is silver fractionals, the smaller the better. This means silver as small as one gram, 2.5 and 5 gram pieces, although for the purposes of minimizing expense and amassing more recognizable forms of silver with easily verifiable provenance... 1/10 oz .999, 1/4 oz .999, and 1/2 oz .999 from reputable mints. 90% silver is going to disappear, and I really do think even one ounce silver rounds will eventually prove unwieldy to barter or resale in a revaluation scenario where we're looking at $800 silver and $20,000 gold. Sure, that might be a huge leap of faith for this congregation to embrace, but certainly it is no worse than the epiphany of comprehension that fiat is totally worthless, and has value only under the current regime. Paradigms change... don't become an extinct fiatsaurus.
beauanderos wrote:So, the aforementioned is the scenario, we're not considering everything else concomitant to a huge price rise in the metals... merely this. How would you prep for this forthcoming silver (and to a lesser degree, gold) shortage? If you could only make ONE more purchase today at current prices, even though it might take an eight week delivery... given a budget of $5000, what would you buy now... and WHY?
Copper Catcher wrote:What say you????
There Is No Silver Shortage
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6dBL2IY3pYo
US Mint Sells Out Of Eagles!
The mint running out of Eagles isn't relevant
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QW2gfyTaiI0
wheeler_dealer wrote: pick up some dimes before they are all lost to the strong hands.
68Camaro wrote: the primary purpose of PM is not for spending during a crisis, but to transfer wealth from one side of crisis to the other side. The most portable form of that is gold. If you ever need to bug-out or move, that ton of silver in the safe isn't going to move with you very easy. I personally am slightly over bought on silver (proportionally) and with that $5000 I would be buying more of easily recognizable gold coin (AGEs, Maples, etc) with it. But that's just me.
johnbrickner wrote:68Camaro wrote: the primary purpose of PM is not for spending during a crisis, but to transfer wealth from one side of crisis to the other side. The most portable form of that is gold. If you ever need to bug-out or move, that ton of silver in the safe isn't going to move with you very easy. I personally am slightly over bought on silver (proportionally) and with that $5000 I would be buying more of easily recognizable gold coin (ASEs, Maples, etc) with it. But that's just me.
Emphasis mine.
Transferring wealth or value. Portability, proportions and privacy.
You've got your Cu, CuNi, Ni, Ag, and Au. All concentrate value and listed from a lower to higher concentration. For many of us, Ag seems to be the main or more popular stack and many diversify into several if not all. However, unless you are going to make your stand on your stack you must consider the bug-out option.
As '68Camaro points out, "that ton of silver in the safe isn't going to move with you very easy". The same must be said for your Cu pennies and Ni nickels (or alloys of CuNi). If the bank is open they can be converted to FRNs. Maybe not the preferred option, but portable.
At some point, you have to move up the concentration value scale and put your wealth into a more portable form. Again, as '68Camaro points out he would be buying ASE's or Maples, etc. to keep the proportions in line with his way of thinking. I have to agree and like the way he thinks. But, at some point the stuff continues to get to darn heavy and is no longer easily portable.
So with my $5,000, I'm buying a ton of concentration in an extremely small package. I'm buying a bit less than a carat of a good quality, fancy yellow colored diamond. What I would consider the next step in wealth concentration, portability, and privacy. Unless things have changed, last I read such a purchase is not reportable. Black and yellow colored being at the bottom of the scale. At the top of this scale would be a red colored diamond at the same size/quality for something less than $1,000,000. Pink and Blue (just below red) are perhaps more popular colors.
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