50centsaver wrote:If the global economy slows, I mean really slows like so many are saying it will, will gold, silver, copper, and nickel go up? or down?
And why?
If importing and exporting slow way down, many more jobs will be lost. People won't have money to spend.
Isn't is true that many people have to buy metals for them to go up? People out of work will be scraping by just to buy food and gas.
Many will have to sell what metals they have just to eat and drive.
My feeling is everything including metals will go down. Please tell me I'm wrong.
50centsaver wrote:If the global economy slows, I mean really slows like so many are saying it will, will gold, silver, copper, and nickel go up? or down?
And why?
If importing and exporting slow way down, many more jobs will be lost. People won't have money to spend.
Isn't is true that many people have to buy metals for them to go up? People out of work will be scraping by just to buy food and gas.
Many will have to sell what metals they have just to eat and drive.
My feeling is everything including metals will go down. Please tell me I'm wrong.
50centsaver wrote:If the global economy slows, I mean really slows like so many are saying it will, will gold, silver, copper, and nickel go up? or down?
And why?
If importing and exporting slow way down, many more jobs will be lost. People won't have money to spend.
Isn't is true that many people have to buy metals for them to go up? People out of work will be scraping by just to buy food and gas.
Many will have to sell what metals they have just to eat and drive.
My feeling is everything including metals will go down. Please tell me I'm wrong.
Mossy wrote:I have to go back to re-read this more carefully, but something I think is a mistake that many people make is to try to make all commodities equal.
Cars and beans are both commodities. Today, a car might be worth a hundred 50# bags of beans. What about after a crash? A car is not worth even 5# of beans?
Also, boomers have loads of "stuff" that could all be called commodities. What relative values now? What relative values 5 years from now? Add to this that retiring boomers are going to want to turn these assets into money, and so are their heirs. All this collected and accumulated stuff is going to hit the market and it's going to lose value.
barrytrot wrote:The "collected stuff" is by-and-large NOT going to be PM's. Other than the people on this board and others, people's "stuff" includes JUNK and maybe an ounce or two of silver and/or gold in some jewelry form. That's it. a few hundred ounces or even pounds added to market, even of gold, is a micro-blip.
Mossy wrote:I allowed myself to be influenced by the "you can't eat gold" foolishness. It's going to cost me.
50centsaver wrote:"I believe that PM's are going to nose dive if/when we have a global depression.
Than later Bang, Zoom to the moon baby.."
Then doesn't it make sense to sell what gold and silver we have now, then BUY when it goes way down?
Mossy wrote:I have to go back to re-read this more carefully, but something I think is a mistake that many people make is to try to make all commodities equal.
Cars and beans are both commodities. Today, a car might be worth a hundred 50# bags of beans. What about after a crash? A car is not worth even 5# of beans?
Also, boomers have loads of "stuff" that could all be called commodities. What relative values now? What relative values 5 years from now? Add to this that retiring boomers are going to want to turn these assets into money, and so are their heirs. All this collected and accumulated stuff is going to hit the market and it's going to lose value.
Rodebaugh wrote:Mossy wrote:I have to go back to re-read this more carefully, but something I think is a mistake that many people make is to try to make all commodities equal.
Cars and beans are both commodities. Today, a car might be worth a hundred 50# bags of beans. What about after a crash? A car is not worth even 5# of beans?
Also, boomers have loads of "stuff" that could all be called commodities. What relative values now? What relative values 5 years from now? Add to this that retiring boomers are going to want to turn these assets into money, and so are their heirs. All this collected and accumulated stuff is going to hit the market and it's going to lose value.
Yeah I am sitting on a goldmine with all my McDonald Shriek glasses and Dale Earnheardt collector plates.
Ray has a point BUT you have gotta be careful folks. Don't forget to live a little. You can't take that silver and gold with you and your kids will just cash it in for cigarettes and lotto tickets when the old man finnaly kicks the bucket. As with everything: Find a balance.
shinnosuke wrote:Any economists out there?
Has a sovereign central bank experiment with a fiat currency ever ended well for the common citizen?
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