68Camaro wrote:You'll hear many different opinions, and you should take no one's word at face value. Listen, but dig yourself, then decide who to believe on what, for good reason.
That said... (and this next has been said many times here by myself and others)
In general, no one should be buying PMs with the idea of getting rich. PMs are not an investment; investment is putting assets into things that build capital. Holding silver and gold doesn't build capital. In a stable world it's far better to only hold a modest amount of PMs as a safety net and let most of your wealth (gold and silver) go to others who will build capital for you. (Buy a farm, build a mill, acquire rental property, create a business, etc.) But we're not in a stable world now, are we?
Acquiring PMs is primarily wealth preservation, and the objective of wealth preservation is ensuring that you retain your greatest means of building capital through a time of crisis. You hold the PM until you get to the other side of the crisis, then when things settle down (years, if not decades) you gradually start testing the waters and releasing it in measured amounts to re-start capital building. (Of course the PMs are also available for life-sustainment in emergency, but you should be preparing for emergency separately and in addition; trading PMs for food, shelter, safety during the crisis should be your method of last resort.)
There is a chance, when PMs are undervalued (as many of us believe they are at the moment), to potentially gain from the tranditional buy low, sell high trading philosophy. Some of us may benefit from that in part. Some of us (not myself) may be truly gifted at doing this. But that is not most of us, and most of us should be planning on buying and holding PMs to get to the side of the pending crisis.
If PMs were fairly valued now, but in 10 years it takes $10,000 USD to buy a loaf of bread (let's say 2000x what it would cost for a $5 loaf today) then your ounce of silver might be worth $40,000 USD. If you do the math, you did NOT come out ahead - your $20 silver coin can still only buy 4 loaves of bread, but you did break even; you retained what you held, unlike your neighbor, whose $40,000 IRA can now buy only 4 loaves of bread. (If your ounce of silver becomes worth $50,000 or $100,000, then you DID come out ahead - be thankful for that, just don't count on it.)
For that crisis is coming, whether this year, next year, 5 years, or 20 years. The ponzi scheme is being widely supported, but the system is unstable and increasing in instabilty by the day. Unstable systems can be actively controlled for a time, but when the instability increases beyond the ability of the controller it will all come crashing down.
As far as what to save, save the things that will hold their value best, and include in that a mix of things, including things that are portable (PMs) as well as things that are life-sustaining (long-term food, water, ammo, weapons, gear, knowledge and experience). That can include copper in several forms (copper wire, for example). But you'll want to retain balance. Why save aluminum cans when you can sell them and buy silver, which is easier to save and far more portable and transferrable. Silver and gold are the very definition of true money (another subject), and even copper has traditionally been considered money at the lowest level (which is the topic that started this site). Aluminum, while it has value, is a commodity. Paper has value as well, but it's easily destroyed, not easily transferrable, and you have to have a warehouse full of it. So focus on things that can't easily be destroyed, are portable, transferrable, divisible, respected, and retain value.
50centsaver wrote:"I have a reasonable amount of it myself." CDN or US nickels? Years ago I learned about CDN nickels here- from Frugi and others. Wonder if he's still around?
My job brings me across the US. I was in very N Idaho close to the CDN border so stopped at 2 US banks and cleaned them out of their CDN nickels. They looked at me strange for paying US $ for CDN nickels, about $200 worth.
Was fun looking for the 1981's and before (99% nickel), plus separated the 1982 -1999 (75% copper/25% nickel) from the rest- made 3 bags. Got about 8lbs 99%, about 10 lbs 75/25, and the biggest bag were the newer ones. Now what do I do with them? If we go to Canada from MN I could take the worthless ones back to a CDN bank and get US $, or more nickels to go thru, but I'm wondering if many more Canadians are going thru nickels now... Maybe I should also cash in the 75/25s and get American. Thing is, if I hold on to the 99% who do I sell the them to if/when the price goes up?
50centsaver wrote:"I have a reasonable amount of it myself." CDN or US nickels?
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50centsaver wrote:68 Camaro wrote: " ..French francs...
I take it you've gone to France to get the francs? How else would you've gotten them?
50centsaver wrote:From now on I will look for francs in coin stores as I travel across the US for my job.
Coin shops buy gold and silver, not .999 nickel. Where would I sell it? Ebay? People on realcent? To mail it would be expensive.
theo wrote:50centsaver wrote:68 Camaro wrote: " ..French francs...
I take it you've gone to France to get the francs? How else would you've gotten them?
They can also be found in any junk foriegn coin box at the LCS or flea market. You have to dig for them sometimes but they are there.
50centsaver wrote:I sure hope the ban on melting cents lifts soon/in my lifetime, otherwsie my kids are going to have some heavy lifting.
It would be enjoyable to make some profit from them. There can't be that many people stacking them. Would be fun to read the joy on this forum.
50centsaver wrote:"most francs that you find in the LCS foreign junk bin cost 20 or 25 cents apiece. That has been my experience in finding them around here. I have a small stash of these, but I don't usually get them unless I find a real bargain."
What's a bargain- $.10 each? I know there's different denonimations too- 1/2 franc, 1, 2, 5, etc. ?
50centsaver wrote:"If PMs were fairly valued now, but in 10 years it takes $10,000 USD to buy a loaf of bread (let's say 2000x what it would cost for a $5 loaf today) then your ounce of silver might be worth $40,000 USD. If you do the math, you did NOT come out ahead - your $20 silver coin can still only buy 4 loaves of bread, but you did break even; you retained what you held, unlike your neighbor, whose $40,000 IRA can now buy only 4 loaves of bread. (If your ounce of silver becomes worth $50,000 or $100,000, then you DID come out ahead - be thankful for that, just don't count on it.)"
A world like this is hard to imagine. Almost everyone will be up a creek if it gets like this- no fiat to survive- a world gone mad re crime, again to survive. What use will my garden be when people will be stealing the food. Word will get out I have some PM and what, I'll have my wife with a cocked and loaded gun ready at all times at the door? Who will be able to sleep at night? I spose I should study ie what life in Zimbabwe was like when their currency became worthless.
I guess appreciate life as it is right now, not complain a healthy loaf of bread does cost $5, and use a bread machine instead.
68Camaro wrote:And as bad as Argentina was, it was an island of chaos supported by a relatively stable world. If the US goes down hard it'll take most of the world with it for a generation.
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