In Roman times an ounce of gold would get you 200 litres of wine. Today that same ounce will get you......... yes , you guessed it 200 litres of wine.
Quite the night out.
In Roman times an ounce of gold would get you 200 litres of wine. Today that same ounce will get you......... yes , you guessed it 200 litres of wine.
Yes that is exactly the point. In a world where almost everything else is in an overpriced bubble silver is the most undervalued commodity in the world right now.Not 100% convinced - I paid around £30 in 1974 for a mint set of coins including a number of sterling silver coins - the set is now worth £60-£100; the inflation value is nearer £375 to £400. £30 invested in low risk stocks in 1974 would now be worth about £1,400.
They are pretty though
Silver, between 1974 and now, has just about kept up with inflation. £30 of silver in 1974 (just short of 16oz) would now be worth around £380 today.
This.It is a very good idea to invest in physical Gold, silver, seeds, tools, chocolate, Land and horses... anything except the banking racket. DD. xxxx
Yes that is exactly the point. In a world where almost everything else is in an overpriced bubble silver is the most undervalued commodity in the world right now.
For over half a century the banks have been suppressing the price of physical silver using the paper markets. Every day more paper silver is traded than even physically exists above ground. This suppression is rapidly coming to an end though as recently many more people have now started standing for physical delivery of very large quantities of the physical metal rather than accepting a paper promise (there is currently over 100 x more paper promises for silver ownership than there are actual physical ounces of silver in the world).
On top of this for the past several years there has been a large and rapidly increasing supply/demand disparity for industrial silver which is steadily eating away at the existing above ground supply. This is likely to continue increasing as new technologies like AI and high efficiency solar panels require ever increasing quantities of silver to make them work. There are also very few new silver mines planned for the foreseeable future and to start new ones from scratch is usually around a 20 year process.
On the other side of the equation regular investments like stocks and shares are currently in the biggest financial bubble that has ever existed in all of history. The banks are all massively in debt and ripe to collapse at the first site of any major wobbles in the financial markets (see The Great Taking for more information on this). Almost every government around the world is in a massive GDP to debt death spiral which is mathematically impossible for them to escape from. This is an epic financial disaster waiting to happen even before you throw in the prospect of a possible WW3 into the mix!
When this global debt bubble finally bursts and the unbacked fiat currencies collapse where so you think all of the rich people will run to to secure their wealth? The same place they always do – Gold. When all the small people realise that they can no longer afford to buy gold where do you think they will run to? The next best thing – Silver. While the rich individually own more than poor people do there are many more poor people than there are rich people and collectively it is still the poor people who hold most of the worlds overall wealth.
At the moment almost nobody’s paying no attention to silver yet the silver market is already incredibly tightly squeezed. What do you think will happen to the prices of gold and silver when there is a massive financial crash and lots of people all try to rush in at the same time to save their wealth?
It's not just the poor. The rich run to silver too. When everything else drops what other options are there? (other than other real physical commodities things like land, food, tools etc.)I don't see in this scenario how poor people running to silver will make it any more valuable. In fact, I don't see that they would do this at all.
It's not just the poor. The rich run to both gold and silver too.
When everything else drops what other options are there? (other than other real physical commodities things like land, food, tools etc.)
I agree. In reality that is what I already do now. I own a wide range of different assets in different areas including all the land, tools and horses I could ever want. There's a chocolate bar and a few packets of seeds in the cupboard too.Far better to invest in a broad range of commodities and resources if you think that's the way to go. Or, of course, the technologies and developments that are causing the increase in demand in the first place. Or, better still, both.
Silver was deemed under-valued in the 70's (it's why we were all persuaded it was a good buy then) - nothing much has changed.
Spread options, mixed risk, for steady growth. But, your money's yours, do what you like with it![]()
If you don't hold it you don't really own it.(various funds do include bullion)
I'm happy with the distinction and my positionIf you don't hold it you don't really own it.
As they say.![]()
Fair enough. Your cash your choice. I hope it works for you. I really do.I'm happy with the distinction and my position![]()
That is the point Chris. It is NOT backed by gold. It is backed by fresh air. It is inevitable that it will collapse. Chris it is a subject really worth studying if we don't want to lose everything. xxxI don't see in this scenario how poor people running to silver will make it any more valuable. In fact, I don't see that they would do this at all.
The wealth and the resources will all be backed by gold, as that's what the 'rich people' (including governments) use. For the poor people to get any of the things the rich people have, they'll need to use that same currency. If I as someone who has valuable commodities (whether food/property/whatever) sees gold as holding value, why would I accept silver in exchange for it? Why would the poor not just buy gold in smaller denominations? Why would the national currency (unless you think there won't be one anymore, in which case metals become of no use compared with food/water/consumables in a barter-based post-apocalyptic economy) suddenly decide to back itself on silver, when no currencies in the world do so currently?
Honestly it feels like a lot of financial disinformation is spread via Social Media algorithms to try and make money for people selling low value items/services, exploiting people's fear of doom and disaster.
There's a lot more gold under the river Thames than fort Knox ever held! From what I've been told London and UK is the world's preferred location for investment gold holdings.I think Horseguy has raised the point that concerns me - who physically holds it and therefore controls it. If it is held by some bullion dealer a) they can hold you to ransom if you want to cash it in, b) It's just magic money, non-existent paper gold/silver as he describes it. (Even if they claim to hold physical gold themselves.)
Chris's point then becomes relevant, if you physically hold it, what good is it?
Irrespective of whether it is gold or silver. If someone else buys into the concept that it has worth, then you have a barter medium (i.e the value and exchange rate are whatever you can negotiate. ) The basic metals themselves have limited uses (more if industry still exists). As a domestic user you might have trouble actually selling it or converting it to something else, at probably a high conversion cost.
How far you go down the rabbit hole of financial collapse/end-of-the world changes the potential value of paper or physical silver&gold, as it does other physical assets. If you can indentify an asset that always has value and saleability irrespective of the state of the world then you have found a secure, if not competitive, investment.
Stocks and shares are just another form of horserace betting, most of mine have been 3-legged donkeys.