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Precious Metals in General

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General interest discussions, not necessarily related to depletion.

Re: Are precious metals really going to be valuable ?

Unread postby Windmills » Sat 22 Oct 2005, 13:35:42

Racer,

I can see your points about gold, and I agree with you to a certain extent. Once economies begin to decline, gold may become as worthless as paper. It won't have any inherent value, just like paper. There are some practical uses for gold, but beyond those, it's just a social contract, an agreement among people to honor its value as a medium of exchange for other goods.

On the other hand, money was a technological breakthrough compared to barter. Having an agreed source of money will assist with the efficiency of any economy, and precious metals might find themselves once again the item of choice as they were for thousands of years.
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Re: Are precious metals really going to be valuable ?

Unread postby untothislast » Sat 22 Oct 2005, 14:13:41

As seems to be the case with other opinions voiced here, I wouldn't rely on anything with an abstract, arbitrary value - particularly in the short term.
Whatever gold may have represented in the past, we are heading into what looks like unknown territory within the coming decade, where any sort of speculation beyond investing time and money in somewhere safe to live - with ready access to a supply of food and water - doesn't seem to make much sense.
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Re: Are precious metals really going to be valuable ?

Unread postby jaws » Sat 22 Oct 2005, 15:12:13

You can't eat government bonds or gasoline either. In fact the only thing that you can eat is food, and yet we have never used food as money. The reason is that it spoils, large quantities of the stuff have low value, and it is not divisible. That's what makes precious metals money, they last a long time, they're small and you can split them up infinitely into smaller pieces.

Liquidity is what makes something money. Trust is what makes something the common money. If there is a tendency towards inflation (doesn't have to be hyperinflation) then gold remains the only form of money we can trust will not inflate. That will protect, and most likely increase, its value.
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Re: Are precious metals really going to be valuable ?

Unread postby jaws » Sat 22 Oct 2005, 15:13:53

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('linlithgowoil', 'n')o, i dont think they will be. the next recession is going to be a worldwide one, and i believe that the value of everything will go down, nothing will be spared.

i suppose its just a matter of chosing things that wont lose their value as much as others. maybe it would be a good idea to invest in fine antiques or something? problem with that of course is that they are tangible and therefore destroyable.
By definition if the value of everything is going down, the value of money is going up. Values are relative comparisons.
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Re: Are precious metals really going to be valuable ?

Unread postby rogerhb » Sat 22 Oct 2005, 17:10:23

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('jaws', 'I')n fact the only thing that you can eat is food, and yet we have never used food as money. The reason is that it spoils.


Ironically, old wine does still get sold at auction, I suppose it's counted as an antique.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('jaws', 'L')iquidity is what makes something money.


Or that may have been it!
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Re: Are precious metals really going to be valuable ?

Unread postby MicroHydro » Sat 22 Oct 2005, 20:03:44

Gold has always been worthless. It was despised by the ancient Chinese, Egyptians, Persians, Greeks, Romans, Aztecs, and Incas. It will not be worth anything after peak oil either. Since gold is worthless, no point in keeping any. Please send it to me, I will take that junk off your hands and give you some crisp pieces of paper!
"The world is changed... I feel it in the water... I feel it in the earth... I smell it in the air... Much that once was, is lost..." - Galadriel
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Re: Are precious metals really going to be valuable ?

Unread postby rockdoc123 » Sat 22 Oct 2005, 20:48:37

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'G')old has always been worthless. It was despised by the ancient Chinese, Egyptians, Persians, Greeks, Romans, Aztecs, and Incas. It will not be worth anything after peak oil either. Since gold is worthless, no point in keeping any. Please send it to me, I will take that junk off your hands and give you some crisp pieces of paper!


although said in a joking vein I think there is some truth in this. Gold might be worth 400+ USD today but if the doomers are right and the S really does HTF then I suspect the bartering might be down to ......one 22 kt necklace= one carrot, one 1 once wafer gold = 5 turnips etc. You may think this is great stuff now but when gold is plentiful (which if you consider all the jewellery and solid gold Rolexes hanging around Manhattan or LA and the enormous amount of pure gold sitting around in dowrey (sp) jewellery in the Middle East ....it probably is quite plentiful) food, shelter, clean water and fuel will be king. If you have a mixed farm with cattle/sheep and human-edible crop (corn, turnips, potatos,beets, etc.) you will be the new Rothchilds.
Now where did I read this " ....and the meek shall inherit the earth :wink:
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Re: Are precious metals really going to be valuable ?

Unread postby perplexd » Sun 23 Oct 2005, 02:22:41

I think we need to distinguish between a "during the crisis" period and the "after that" period.

I'll be 65 in 2035. If we're really peaking today, then I expect a reasonable chance that there will be some economy rising out of the ashes by 2035. It might look a lot more like 1880 than 1980, but an economy is an economy, and owning gold in a working economy ain't a bad thing.

During the crisis? Sure -- in a world full of starving people you won't get a bucket of carrots or a pitcher of clean water for your ounce of bullion. During that time, I suppose your hundred dollar bills would at least be useful to start a cooking fire, and this would make them more useful than gold in the short term.
The passing of abundant oil is not shaping up to be a soft landing for those with the fattest asses. - Jan Lundberg
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Re: Are precious metals really going to be valuable ?

Unread postby ohanian » Sun 23 Oct 2005, 09:02:28

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('jaws', 'Y')ou can't eat government bonds or gasoline either. In fact the only thing that you can eat is food, and yet we have never used food as money. The reason is that it spoils, large quantities of the stuff have low value, and it is not divisible. That's what makes precious metals money, they last a long time, they're small and you can split them up infinitely into smaller pieces.


Rice as money (history of humanity)

Other than a source of good nutrition, rice had played anotherimportant factor among the old Japanese. From ancient times until the mid-19th century, rice was used as currency for paying taxes and wages. Like the rank of the feudal lords were all measured by how much rice they had, rice was a ruler which indicated one's economic status. Try to think of banks filled with rice instead of money! Yikes!

Wages for ordinary people were paid mostly in copper and silver coins. Wages for the Samurai class, which accounted for 10% of the total population, were paid in amounts of rice. The Tokugawa shogun granted the Samurai a fief, the stipend was measured by the volume of rice the region could be expected to produce. Three times the year the Samurai sold the rice collected as a land tax to traders – the Samurai were better served with money they could spend on goods – part of the problem Japan's economy faced.
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Re: Are precious metals really going to be valuable ?

Unread postby jaws » Sun 23 Oct 2005, 17:51:08

Well there you go. The Samurai were paid in a commodity and the first thing they did was sell it for real money, because that commodity was too risky and illiquid.

It's like someone working for a bakery being paid in bread. The first thing they would do is sell the bread for real money. That would take a lot of time and be a big hassle, especially since they would be bidding against their employer. It's much simpler to pay them directly in money.
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Re: Are precious metals really going to be valuable ?

Unread postby rogerhb » Sun 23 Oct 2005, 17:54:43

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('jaws', 'I')t's like someone working for a bakery being paid in bread. The first thing they would do is sell the bread for real money.


They could get into the Ginger-Bread-Housing market.
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Re: Are precious metals really going to be valuable ?

Unread postby spot5050 » Tue 25 Oct 2005, 19:57:27

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MicroHydro', 'G')old has always been worthless. It was despised by the ancient Chinese, Egyptians, Persians, Greeks, Romans, Aztecs, and Incas. It will not be worth anything after peak oil either. Since gold is worthless, no point in keeping any. Please send it to me, I will take that junk off your hands and give you some crisp pieces of paper!

microhydro you must not burden yourself with that horrid yellow metal just to help out a fellow peak-oiler.

I agree with windmills, gold has alway been a worthless metal; you can trace its worthlessness back 5000 years. It's rubbish. Get rid of it right now.

If you get lumbered with any gold that you can't get rid of, let me know and I may take it off your hands if you're lucky.
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Re: Are precious metals really going to be valuable ?

Unread postby Backtosteam » Tue 25 Oct 2005, 23:38:30

If selling is what you've decided I think you are smart to trade some of your paper money for gold. Yeah, it may not be worth $500/oz, but it will be worth a lot more than paper if things really go bad. The worst thing to do is sell and keep paper money...at least with a house you have some sort of an asset...may not be worth half a million, but at least you have a roof.
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Re: Are precious metals really going to be valuable ?

Unread postby GoIllini » Tue 25 Oct 2005, 23:56:49

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('linlithgowoil', 'n')o, i dont think they will be. the next recession is going to be a worldwide one, and i believe that the value of everything will go down, nothing will be spared.

i suppose its just a matter of chosing things that wont lose their value as much as others. maybe it would be a good idea to invest in fine antiques or something? problem with that of course is that they are tangible and therefore destroyable.


Problem is that everything's relative to everything else. If everything goes down in value equally, then everything stays the same price. If oil goes down more slowly than everything else, then oil just gets more expensive.

What often seems to happen in a recession is that the demand for labor shifts left, thus reducing the value of labor relative to everything else.
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Re: Are precious metals really going to be valuable ?

Unread postby GoIllini » Wed 26 Oct 2005, 00:00:21

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Backtosteam', 'I')f selling is what you've decided I think you are smart to trade some of your paper money for gold. Yeah, it may not be worth $500/oz, but it will be worth a lot more than paper if things really go bad. The worst thing to do is sell and keep paper money...at least with a house you have some sort of an asset...may not be worth half a million, but at least you have a roof.


Wait a sec...

Gold will be worth more than $500/oz if it goes down more slowly than paper does. Now, if you're saying that gold won't be able to buy you as much when peak oil hits, I suggest buying futures in commodities you'd be using after the peak- like timber, oil, coal, and maybe a few more useful metals.

Now, if you're going to be hiding your gold under the mattress, my suggestion might not be preferable to what you're planning on. However, if you plan on buying gold and having it stored somewhere, the commodities market is probably going to be as reliable at getting your gold to you as a lot of bank vaults.
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Re: Are precious metals really going to be valuable ?

Unread postby heimdall » Wed 26 Oct 2005, 05:55:32

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('GoIllini', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Backtosteam', '.')..
if you're saying that gold won't be able to buy you as much when peak oil hits, I suggest buying futures in commodities you'd be using after the peak- like timber, oil, coal, and maybe a few more useful metals.
...

This is similar to my strategy: Hedge, hedge, hedge.

If you worry about energy supply, hedge energy.

If you worry about oil supply, hedge oil.

If you worry that the US is about to implode financially, buy gold, and have it stored where the US can't get to it. We are in an era in which there seems to be no really reliable currency except maybe the Swiss franc, but Switzerland is not a major power and that <i>is</i> a "maybe". If confidence in the dollar evaporates, it will plunge in value relative to gold and the Swiss franc, but, of these two, I expect gold to do better. Not enough Swiss francs to go around.
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Re: Are precious metals really going to be valuable ?

Unread postby thuja » Wed 26 Oct 2005, 11:21:52

Before investing in precious metals, you should be able to know what you want from it- do you want to cash out in 5-10 years if hyperinflation kills the dollar and gold and silver are worth a great deal more than their present value? Or do you want to keep it in case of a total crash as a new (old) form of currency that supplants paper money? In the first case it may be smarter to buy the metals in funds or have them kept with the distributor (Kitco does this and you don't have to worry about hundreds of pounds of metal). In the second case you may want to buy a certain amount of coins; gold and silver, to use as a proxy currency and keep it close at hand (so the govt. can't confiscate it.)

In my belief, the second possibility may not happen for quite a while (decades), but it sure is nice to have a little something stashed away in case of a quick collapse. In the long run, I may hand down the coins to my children or grandchildren who would need them when a new gold and silver based economy arises.
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Re: Are precious metals really going to be valuable ?

Unread postby RacerJace » Thu 27 Oct 2005, 07:31:10

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '.').. do you want to cash out in 5-10 years if hyperinflation kills the dollar and gold and silver are worth a great deal more than their present value?


yes !

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'O')r do you want to keep it in case of a total crash as a new (old) form of currency that supplants paper money?


yes again ! but I'd probably keep a smaller amount of gold coin so that it can be stored and moved safely and discreetly.


$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '.'). In the long run, I may hand down the coins to my children or grandchildren ..


my thoughts exactly. At least my children will dispise me less for considering thier future against the world they inherit.
:cry: :(
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Explain to me how precious metals can save you.!

Unread postby jupiter422 » Tue 28 Feb 2006, 19:44:05

I have done lots of research on currencies and precious metals which ,I'm sure most of you all have too, .I understand the bullish case for them ,given the current economic outlook.I also undertsand the bullish case for silver , being that it is undervalued and there is the peak silver argument.
I personally own 100 or so ounces of silver ,but I have owned them for years.They are .999 pure silver rounds.
However I don't see why so many people are jumping on this bandwagon ,like it's going to save the day.Unless you own a reallyl arge holding .I'm talking holdings that can effect the markets.If you do have holding this large are they secure?Do you own the physival metals or just options on future contracts Or do you just have a pice of paper saying you own this much ,but have no clue if it's there?I suggest taking hold of the physical metal.

After tshtf ,what are you going to do with your metals?Do you plan on selling right before?If so then what?I think buying precious metals is a way o trying to dodge the incoming bullet of catastrophe,but if the whole system crashes and the dieoff begins to transcend wtf are you going to do with silver and gold?I am very intersted in making this a long thread that gets into the details of this topic.I have noticed the bullish attitude on metals by alot of users on this site.I can agree with the assessment that there is a bullish case for metals ,but I don't see it doing anything to divert the complete disorderly decay of our world as we have always known it.
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Re: Explain to me how precious metals can save you.!

Unread postby rogerhb » Tue 28 Feb 2006, 20:49:28

The idea is that in the case of hyper-inflation or lost of faith in 'fiat' currencies people will prefer more tangible assets in exchange for goods and services.

Fiat currencies have a history of failing and there is no reason why the current system should be any different.

If you have wealth as money or as a number in a computer record and the banks crash or hyperinflation takes hold where will your wealth go?

Historically precious metals have been used as money for many reasons that you should already be aware of.

For this to be any use in a crash you need to physically have the gold in small recognizable units.
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