johnbrickner wrote:As '68Camaro points out, "that ton of silver in the safe isn't going to move with you very easy".
Catfish4u wrote:johnbrickner wrote:As '68Camaro points out, "that ton of silver in the safe isn't going to move with you very easy".
I would guess there are much less than 1,000 'individuals' in the world with more than 1 ton of physical silver. A half ton of silver would be currently valued around $375,000 and could easily be moved with a car. Probably less than .00001% of the worlds population would have more than a half ton of silver.
68Camaro wrote:Let's lower that bar to 500 pounds. 500 pounds may be technically transportable, but it's 10 of the heaviest suitcases (not counting the suitcases themselves) that the airlines will let you check.
beauanderos wrote: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.
You're right, basically what you said... but as I was typing my answer yours posted, and I wasn't going to go to the effort of rewriting mine
It would be GREAT if someone stateside could do a Valcambi. "Kurr?" "Rodie?" "Silver Addict?" "Nate?" Step up, Brothers... the markets await.
68Camaro wrote:We're currently allowed to take out 200 toz of gold US coin without question.
johnbrickner wrote:68Camaro wrote:We're currently allowed to take out 200 toz of gold US coin without question.
A little over 17 lbs (if my math is correct)
IdahoCopper wrote:The best way to flee the country with a lot of gold is to put all of it deep in the bilge of your 50-foot sailing yacht. The extra mass down there will help the boat to sail more upright, and at a faster speed. A 50-footer is not too big, and its not too small. A sailboat that size can sail comfortably across any ocean to anywhere that is less than 60 degrees north or south of the equator.
If anyone needs a skipper for their project like this, let me know.
beauanderos wrote:interesting the way this turned into a thread about gold... when it was what form of silver, and why, you would be buying if you knew this could be your last purchase?
Lemon Thrower wrote:IdahoCopper wrote:The best way to flee the country with a lot of gold is to put all of it deep in the bilge of your 50-foot sailing yacht. The extra mass down there will help the boat to sail more upright, and at a faster speed. A 50-footer is not too big, and its not too small. A sailboat that size can sail comfortably across any ocean to anywhere that is less than 60 degrees north or south of the equator.
If anyone needs a skipper for their project like this, let me know.
some day
Z00 wrote:OK, I got it now, when the balloon goes up.... we all pack a suitcase with "whatever" and all meet at the marina for a party out past the 12 mile limit.
Works for me.
beauanderos wrote:
db23 had a couple of rolls of these for sale a few months back. I don't remember them ever selling.
beauanderos wrote:Certainly something to consider... thinking outside the box there, good on ya
BUT... isn't DeBeers just the opposite of JPMorgan? Keeping prices artificially high by suppressing release of what is reportedly millions of carats from reaching the markets? I read some marketing stuff from the sixties and seventies about how they popularized diamonds with women (good reading btw) and how there are huge diamond fields in Russia... but that a diamond cartel keeps prices artificially high by only permitting a trickle of stones into the market each year. Is this an urban myth?
68Camaro wrote:Diamonds... good thought, but my problem with diamonds is that they are made from a common element carbon and can be synthesized, and even the natural diamonds aren't actually rare, just made artificially scarce and the desire ramped up for women by the cartel(s). There are faux diamonds that are as attractive (if not more so) like moissonite.
beauanderos wrote:
db23 had a couple of rolls of these for sale a few months back. I don't remember them ever selling.
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