AdamsSamoa wrote:I am doing it... a little at a time. buying 1/10th and 1/4 OZ bullion coins. Dave Ramsey says to have an emergency fund.... might as well be in gold. If you have a $500 unanticipated debt, you can liquidate a few 1/10th OZ AGEs fairly quickly
IdahoCopper wrote:If you do not think you will keep & hold any PM purchase for at least 5 years (10 years is better), do not buy, keep the cash instead.
PMs are a Long Term play. If something expensive fails and you must cash out Ag at $14, when you paid $17, your emergency just got 20% more expensive.
IdahoCopper wrote:If you do not think you will keep & hold any PM purchase for at least 5 years (10 years is better), do not buy, keep the cash instead.
PMs are a Long Term play. If something expensive fails and you must cash out Ag at $14, when you paid $17, your emergency just got 20% more expensive.
68Camaro wrote: If you think you need to escape your area for a long period of time, even to another country, as so many have experience first-hand in the past (such as escape from an totalitarian regime), nothing would beat gold in its ability to transport wealth, supported by silver (more easily used in daily commerce, as noted) to the extent you can stand the weight to carry it, and cash as makes sense.
coindood wrote:It makes sense to have an emergency fund of around 3-6 months of expenses. Since it's something that you'll only ever tap into in an emergency, is gold a good option for this? In the near future I'd like to start buying slabbed St Gaudens or other coins I've always wanted to own (preferably in the $1k-2k range each) and have them double as my emergency fund. It has more eye appeal than looking at a bank statement every month.
Has anyone ever compared the rise/fall of gold vs a high yield savings acct (2.5% or so), which is where most people keep their fund?
68Camaro wrote:Those fleeing for their lives won't worry about a few nicities, and a few gold coins are easy to hide.
Recyclersteve wrote:Thanks IdahoCopper. I was kinda thinking along the same lines, but didn’t have any recent experience to back it up.
IdahoCopper wrote:68Camaro wrote:Those fleeing for their lives won't worry about a few nicities, and a few gold coins are easy to hide.
Airport scanners easily show PMs. The machines look for density and PMs are dense. A big red square on the operator's screen, outlines the detected object.
Its almost as if the scanning system was designed to unveil hidden gold, trying to get past the checkpoint. Why am I not surprised?
InfleXion wrote:Cash is for emergency fund. In case of emergency, you don't want to have to sell low.
Gold is for wealth preservation, protection from financial catastrophe, and easy transport.
Silver is for bartering day to day costs, and a high risk, high reward longterm investment.
BitCoin is for temporary holding while crossing borders either with intent of not returning or at least not bringing back home whatever you turn the BTC into.
Recyclersteve wrote:InfleXion wrote:Cash is for emergency fund. In case of emergency, you don't want to have to sell low.
Gold is for wealth preservation, protection from financial catastrophe, and easy transport.
Silver is for bartering day to day costs, and a high risk, high reward longterm investment.
BitCoin is for temporary holding while crossing borders either with intent of not returning or at least not bringing back home whatever you turn the BTC into.
Interesting perspective. This does, of course, make me think about diversity. If you have $5 million in cash but it isn’t in a fireproof location and that place burns down or is damaged by a hurricane or tornado, what do you do then?
Also, diversity doesn’t just mean different types of investments but different locations as well. If you had gold, silver and currency and a tsunami washed them all away or they were all destroyed by a gas explosion, what good was your diversity?
InfleXion wrote: A good problem to have, not one most get to enjoy. As much as the too big to fail banks get a deservedly bad rap, they do serve a purpose in that case. Although credit unions are quite popular, they have stricter limits on ATM withdrawals. I like to use both of those to varying degrees, but not for anything metal related. I suppose that boils down to who you trust and where they are. I'm not sure I'd be comfortable burying gold in a foreign country or keeping a safe at a vacation home. There are always gold storage facilities which might make sense for a broader diversification plan.
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