FelixDeCat
Lifer
- Aug 4, 2000
- 31,000
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I wouldn't buy bullion. You're better off buying things that are valuable for other reasons. Gold coins which are rare or have very limited mintages should hold their value better in a down market and be worth more when the market is up. Do a search on gold coins on ebay to get some idea of how such things are valued.I probably won't do it, but previous discussion got me thinking that it would be a bad idea to just have a few ounces or up to a kilo of gold for "safety." Purpose would be 99% to have an item that's held some sort of value for the past 10,000 years and won't go bad on me -- toilet paper and bullets eventually go bad if stored poorly. It's even fire proof to some degree -- too bad my corpse isn't. ETFs or storing it in a safety deposit box don't help for that?
http://www.apmex.com/product/11934/1-kilo-gold-bar-various-mints
But you would be better off diversifying a little bit, mostly 1 oz coins and what I would call "premium bullion," mix and match how you feel comfortable.
http://www.apmex.com/product/84889/2015-canada-1-oz-gold-maple-leaf-bu
http://www.apmex.com/product/39598/1-oz-gold-buffalo-bu-random-year?toppicks4
http://www.apmex.com/product/93765/2016-great-britain-gold-1-oz-britannia-bu
http://www.apmex.com/product/1122/20-saint-gaudens-gold-double-eagle-au-random-year
http://www.apmex.com/product/14243/1930-uruguay-gold-5-pesos-au-agw-2501
If you wish to do all this completely anonymously, my advice is to go to a big coin show (if they have them in Canada) or even a local coin shop, and bring lots of cash and be careful. I don't think others listened to you, you want a $35-40k "golden" insurance policy. Nothing wrong with that. And for this, you do not buy a promise of gold, you just buy the gold. ETF's and other forms of paper gold are for investing/gambling, they are not insurance policies. A 1928 $20 Gold certificate today has much less value than the gold in the coin it was then redeemable for. That's why you just take the gold and not the promise. Like you said, gold can't be destroyed, not nearly as easily as a promise can be broken. Insurance policies are about avoiding risk. And it's not about making money or being worried if it goes down in value. Nobody kicks themselves in the ass for buying fire insurance for 20 years because their house never caught fire.
That is a terrible comparison. The only time that gold is needed for its "value through any circumstance" idea is when something really terrible happens. A house fire isn't that bad of an event.Nobody kicks themselves in the ass for buying fire insurance for 20 years because their house never caught fire.
That is a terrible comparison. The only time that gold is needed for its "value through any circumstance" idea is when something really terrible happens. A house fire isn't that bad of an event.
A better comparison would be buying sun eating the Earth insurance for 20 years. Sure, you'll be quite glad that the sun didn't envelop the Earth. And you'd think you'll be glad that you had the insurance if the sun does envelop the Earth in your lifetime. But, if you really thought through the scenario, you'd realize that at least one of (A) you or (B) the insurance company likely won't make it through that event so you can't collect anyways.
Gold bars are the same thing. If we experience such a terrible event that cash, ETFs, land, ammo, etc have no value, then gold would have no use either.
I wouldn't buy bullion. You're better off buying things that are valuable for other reasons. Gold coins which are rare or have very limited mintages should hold their value better in a down market and be worth more when the market is up. Do a search on gold coins on ebay to get some idea of how such things are valued.
It was requested to post the following reply to Imp from a non member.
kthxbai
Not that they couldn't have come up with something else, but the Paris attacks make it far too easy for the Fed with coming up with an excuse.
100 on the QQQs here we come
I wouldn't buy bullion. You're better off buying things that are valuable for other reasons. Gold coins which are rare or have very limited mintages should hold their value better in a down market and be worth more when the market is up. Do a search on gold coins on ebay to get some idea of how such things are valued.
This puts me in the situation that I can:
(A) Sell all of my DSLV now before the peak. We would be just below the lower Roth IRA income limit so no worries there. But I would not get the full gains on my stock.
(B) Wait until DSLV reaches the upper $70 range. Sell then. But then we would be in the Roth IRA income cap range and have to withdraw a portion of it. The result would be a lot more paperwork and less money in a tax-deferred account.
(C) Wait until 2016 to sell DSLV, in which case I may have missed this whole opportunity to gain on it since it could easily be back in the $40 range by then.
One interest rate move could pull the floor out of silver. $10 to $12 isn't unthinkable. For most of recent history, it was in the $5/ounce range, although I certainly am not counting on it going back that low any time soon.The problem is that silver really looks to be targetting $13, or even $12, which tends to make one greedy.
Well that went well. So what's next, QQQ 120 here we come?
Yearly rebalancing basically does that for you. You end up selling a bit of those funds that did well and then buying funds that did less well. In the end, rebalancing forces you to buy low and sell high over and over again without any human emotions that tend to get in the way of these decisions.Are there any services that will give recommendations on mutual fund sector cycles or timing?
It seems like there should be patterns in sector performance that you could take advantage of.
It seems too conservative to pick 10 diverse mutual funds and let it ride forever.
There has to be a website or service that helps re-balance your portfolio every 3,6,12 months or so.
Up till now, my strategy has been to shift money into a mutual fund that is historically down. ie... I shifted a bunch into Real Estate funds in 2008-9 and they have paid off very well.
The same could be done for energy now.
I just read about Vanguard's Personal Advisor Services for 0.30%.
https://investor.vanguard.com/financial-advisor/financial-planner
It sound like they help you rebalance and give advise.
It's limited to Vanguard funds only though.
Also, I don't know if it would be worth the .3% or not.
Thoughts?
lol nvm