Home › Forums › Financial Markets/Economics › Sold my gold
- This topic has 60 replies, 9 voices, and was last updated 15 years ago by
Anonymous.
-
AuthorPosts
-
-
February 5, 2008 at 1:28 PM #11717
-
February 5, 2008 at 1:44 PM #148439
scaredyclassic
Participantwell. No one knows anything. However. Gold’s not done. I did get nervous right at 900 and sold all i had. just kinda hoping to catch a downdraft. but it’ll be 1200-1500 before a couple years. Here’s what’s gonna happen; there aint gonna be nowhere else to put any stored value. Nowhere to run. Just gold. And booze and firearms. I’ll buy back when it hits $820 or $1020. either way, there’s noweher else to go.
Drink Heavily.
-
February 5, 2008 at 1:44 PM #148692
scaredyclassic
Participantwell. No one knows anything. However. Gold’s not done. I did get nervous right at 900 and sold all i had. just kinda hoping to catch a downdraft. but it’ll be 1200-1500 before a couple years. Here’s what’s gonna happen; there aint gonna be nowhere else to put any stored value. Nowhere to run. Just gold. And booze and firearms. I’ll buy back when it hits $820 or $1020. either way, there’s noweher else to go.
Drink Heavily.
-
February 5, 2008 at 1:44 PM #148709
scaredyclassic
Participantwell. No one knows anything. However. Gold’s not done. I did get nervous right at 900 and sold all i had. just kinda hoping to catch a downdraft. but it’ll be 1200-1500 before a couple years. Here’s what’s gonna happen; there aint gonna be nowhere else to put any stored value. Nowhere to run. Just gold. And booze and firearms. I’ll buy back when it hits $820 or $1020. either way, there’s noweher else to go.
Drink Heavily.
-
February 5, 2008 at 1:44 PM #148722
scaredyclassic
Participantwell. No one knows anything. However. Gold’s not done. I did get nervous right at 900 and sold all i had. just kinda hoping to catch a downdraft. but it’ll be 1200-1500 before a couple years. Here’s what’s gonna happen; there aint gonna be nowhere else to put any stored value. Nowhere to run. Just gold. And booze and firearms. I’ll buy back when it hits $820 or $1020. either way, there’s noweher else to go.
Drink Heavily.
-
February 5, 2008 at 1:44 PM #148792
scaredyclassic
Participantwell. No one knows anything. However. Gold’s not done. I did get nervous right at 900 and sold all i had. just kinda hoping to catch a downdraft. but it’ll be 1200-1500 before a couple years. Here’s what’s gonna happen; there aint gonna be nowhere else to put any stored value. Nowhere to run. Just gold. And booze and firearms. I’ll buy back when it hits $820 or $1020. either way, there’s noweher else to go.
Drink Heavily.
-
February 5, 2008 at 1:45 PM #148443
scaredyclassic
Participantwell. No one knows anything. However. Gold’s not done. I did get nervous right at 900 and sold all i had. just kinda hoping to catch a downdraft. but it’ll be 1200-1500 before a couple years. Here’s what’s gonna happen; there aint gonna be nowhere else to put any stored value. Nowhere to run. Just gold. And booze and firearms. I’ll buy back when it hits $820 or $1020. either way, there’s noweher else to go.
Drink Heavily.
-
February 5, 2008 at 2:08 PM #148458
Eugene
Participant“Here’s what’s gonna happen; there aint gonna be nowhere else to put any stored value. Nowhere to run. Just gold”
Gold does not have enough intrinsic value to justify $900 per ounce. It costs that much because someone on the market is willing to pay that much for it. Think dot-com stocks. Maybe we’re still in 1998, or maybe it’s already February 2000. No one knows.
If you want to put your stored value somewhere – try euros, swiss francs, yen, oil, corn futures.
-
February 5, 2008 at 3:08 PM #148493
Borat
ParticipantIf you want to put your stored value somewhere – try euros, swiss francs, yen, oil, corn futures.
Don’t know about the corn and oil, but any currency issued by a country that depends on the US to buy its goods may have the same problem the dollar does. As the dollar devalues relative to the euro or the yen, the european or japanese central banks may decide to devalue their own currency to keep their US exports affordable. As other countries begin consuming more, this may cease to be the case, but for now Japan and Europe need us to buy their products.
I have heard that the Swiss Franc and the Yen are good bets right now. Who knows about gold, though.
-
February 5, 2008 at 3:12 PM #148503
scaredyclassic
Participantyeah, people have only been using gold as a store of value, since, like the beginning of recorded history. Not much of a track record. When real declines start to kick in, like dow 4000, gold will show that it is not a bet, but a hedge.
Drink Heavily.
-
February 5, 2008 at 3:12 PM #148755
scaredyclassic
Participantyeah, people have only been using gold as a store of value, since, like the beginning of recorded history. Not much of a track record. When real declines start to kick in, like dow 4000, gold will show that it is not a bet, but a hedge.
Drink Heavily.
-
February 5, 2008 at 3:12 PM #148773
scaredyclassic
Participantyeah, people have only been using gold as a store of value, since, like the beginning of recorded history. Not much of a track record. When real declines start to kick in, like dow 4000, gold will show that it is not a bet, but a hedge.
Drink Heavily.
-
February 5, 2008 at 3:12 PM #148786
scaredyclassic
Participantyeah, people have only been using gold as a store of value, since, like the beginning of recorded history. Not much of a track record. When real declines start to kick in, like dow 4000, gold will show that it is not a bet, but a hedge.
Drink Heavily.
-
February 5, 2008 at 3:12 PM #148857
scaredyclassic
Participantyeah, people have only been using gold as a store of value, since, like the beginning of recorded history. Not much of a track record. When real declines start to kick in, like dow 4000, gold will show that it is not a bet, but a hedge.
Drink Heavily.
-
February 5, 2008 at 3:08 PM #148745
Borat
ParticipantIf you want to put your stored value somewhere – try euros, swiss francs, yen, oil, corn futures.
Don’t know about the corn and oil, but any currency issued by a country that depends on the US to buy its goods may have the same problem the dollar does. As the dollar devalues relative to the euro or the yen, the european or japanese central banks may decide to devalue their own currency to keep their US exports affordable. As other countries begin consuming more, this may cease to be the case, but for now Japan and Europe need us to buy their products.
I have heard that the Swiss Franc and the Yen are good bets right now. Who knows about gold, though.
-
February 5, 2008 at 3:08 PM #148763
Borat
ParticipantIf you want to put your stored value somewhere – try euros, swiss francs, yen, oil, corn futures.
Don’t know about the corn and oil, but any currency issued by a country that depends on the US to buy its goods may have the same problem the dollar does. As the dollar devalues relative to the euro or the yen, the european or japanese central banks may decide to devalue their own currency to keep their US exports affordable. As other countries begin consuming more, this may cease to be the case, but for now Japan and Europe need us to buy their products.
I have heard that the Swiss Franc and the Yen are good bets right now. Who knows about gold, though.
-
February 5, 2008 at 3:08 PM #148776
Borat
ParticipantIf you want to put your stored value somewhere – try euros, swiss francs, yen, oil, corn futures.
Don’t know about the corn and oil, but any currency issued by a country that depends on the US to buy its goods may have the same problem the dollar does. As the dollar devalues relative to the euro or the yen, the european or japanese central banks may decide to devalue their own currency to keep their US exports affordable. As other countries begin consuming more, this may cease to be the case, but for now Japan and Europe need us to buy their products.
I have heard that the Swiss Franc and the Yen are good bets right now. Who knows about gold, though.
-
February 5, 2008 at 3:08 PM #148847
Borat
ParticipantIf you want to put your stored value somewhere – try euros, swiss francs, yen, oil, corn futures.
Don’t know about the corn and oil, but any currency issued by a country that depends on the US to buy its goods may have the same problem the dollar does. As the dollar devalues relative to the euro or the yen, the european or japanese central banks may decide to devalue their own currency to keep their US exports affordable. As other countries begin consuming more, this may cease to be the case, but for now Japan and Europe need us to buy their products.
I have heard that the Swiss Franc and the Yen are good bets right now. Who knows about gold, though.
-
-
February 5, 2008 at 2:08 PM #148711
Eugene
Participant“Here’s what’s gonna happen; there aint gonna be nowhere else to put any stored value. Nowhere to run. Just gold”
Gold does not have enough intrinsic value to justify $900 per ounce. It costs that much because someone on the market is willing to pay that much for it. Think dot-com stocks. Maybe we’re still in 1998, or maybe it’s already February 2000. No one knows.
If you want to put your stored value somewhere – try euros, swiss francs, yen, oil, corn futures.
-
February 5, 2008 at 2:08 PM #148728
Eugene
Participant“Here’s what’s gonna happen; there aint gonna be nowhere else to put any stored value. Nowhere to run. Just gold”
Gold does not have enough intrinsic value to justify $900 per ounce. It costs that much because someone on the market is willing to pay that much for it. Think dot-com stocks. Maybe we’re still in 1998, or maybe it’s already February 2000. No one knows.
If you want to put your stored value somewhere – try euros, swiss francs, yen, oil, corn futures.
-
February 5, 2008 at 2:08 PM #148741
Eugene
Participant“Here’s what’s gonna happen; there aint gonna be nowhere else to put any stored value. Nowhere to run. Just gold”
Gold does not have enough intrinsic value to justify $900 per ounce. It costs that much because someone on the market is willing to pay that much for it. Think dot-com stocks. Maybe we’re still in 1998, or maybe it’s already February 2000. No one knows.
If you want to put your stored value somewhere – try euros, swiss francs, yen, oil, corn futures.
-
February 5, 2008 at 2:08 PM #148812
Eugene
Participant“Here’s what’s gonna happen; there aint gonna be nowhere else to put any stored value. Nowhere to run. Just gold”
Gold does not have enough intrinsic value to justify $900 per ounce. It costs that much because someone on the market is willing to pay that much for it. Think dot-com stocks. Maybe we’re still in 1998, or maybe it’s already February 2000. No one knows.
If you want to put your stored value somewhere – try euros, swiss francs, yen, oil, corn futures.
-
-
February 5, 2008 at 1:45 PM #148695
scaredyclassic
Participantwell. No one knows anything. However. Gold’s not done. I did get nervous right at 900 and sold all i had. just kinda hoping to catch a downdraft. but it’ll be 1200-1500 before a couple years. Here’s what’s gonna happen; there aint gonna be nowhere else to put any stored value. Nowhere to run. Just gold. And booze and firearms. I’ll buy back when it hits $820 or $1020. either way, there’s noweher else to go.
Drink Heavily.
-
February 5, 2008 at 1:45 PM #148714
scaredyclassic
Participantwell. No one knows anything. However. Gold’s not done. I did get nervous right at 900 and sold all i had. just kinda hoping to catch a downdraft. but it’ll be 1200-1500 before a couple years. Here’s what’s gonna happen; there aint gonna be nowhere else to put any stored value. Nowhere to run. Just gold. And booze and firearms. I’ll buy back when it hits $820 or $1020. either way, there’s noweher else to go.
Drink Heavily.
-
February 5, 2008 at 1:45 PM #148727
scaredyclassic
Participantwell. No one knows anything. However. Gold’s not done. I did get nervous right at 900 and sold all i had. just kinda hoping to catch a downdraft. but it’ll be 1200-1500 before a couple years. Here’s what’s gonna happen; there aint gonna be nowhere else to put any stored value. Nowhere to run. Just gold. And booze and firearms. I’ll buy back when it hits $820 or $1020. either way, there’s noweher else to go.
Drink Heavily.
-
February 5, 2008 at 1:45 PM #148797
scaredyclassic
Participantwell. No one knows anything. However. Gold’s not done. I did get nervous right at 900 and sold all i had. just kinda hoping to catch a downdraft. but it’ll be 1200-1500 before a couple years. Here’s what’s gonna happen; there aint gonna be nowhere else to put any stored value. Nowhere to run. Just gold. And booze and firearms. I’ll buy back when it hits $820 or $1020. either way, there’s noweher else to go.
Drink Heavily.
-
February 5, 2008 at 4:42 PM #148543
anxvariety
ParticipantIt costs that much because someone on the market is willing to pay that much for it.
WOW!! That’s amazing!
-
February 5, 2008 at 7:52 PM #148568
hipmatt
ParticipantGold is just beginning. As the USA prints more money, slashes rates, and the returns on investments diminish, look for the dollar to weaken further and gold to continue up. If the correction continues I will buy more of it. Dollars will be worth much less and the only thing I see as inevitable is massive inflation.
-
February 12, 2008 at 1:23 PM #152227
Eugene
Participanthttp://in.reuters.com/article/businessNews/idINIndia-31896320080212
“India’s gold imports in January slumped to just five tonnes from 62 tonnes in the same month a year ago as a surge in prices saps demand in the world’s largest consumer …
“There is almost zero demand. From 62 tonnes gold imports in January last year, only five tonnes were brought from overseas in January 2008”
make your own decisions folks.
P.S. just noticed that there’s a new Finance and Investing article and it encourages people to buy precious metals stocks. We’ll see who’s right and who’s wrong.
-
February 12, 2008 at 1:23 PM #152496
Eugene
Participanthttp://in.reuters.com/article/businessNews/idINIndia-31896320080212
“India’s gold imports in January slumped to just five tonnes from 62 tonnes in the same month a year ago as a surge in prices saps demand in the world’s largest consumer …
“There is almost zero demand. From 62 tonnes gold imports in January last year, only five tonnes were brought from overseas in January 2008”
make your own decisions folks.
P.S. just noticed that there’s a new Finance and Investing article and it encourages people to buy precious metals stocks. We’ll see who’s right and who’s wrong.
-
February 12, 2008 at 1:23 PM #152502
Eugene
Participanthttp://in.reuters.com/article/businessNews/idINIndia-31896320080212
“India’s gold imports in January slumped to just five tonnes from 62 tonnes in the same month a year ago as a surge in prices saps demand in the world’s largest consumer …
“There is almost zero demand. From 62 tonnes gold imports in January last year, only five tonnes were brought from overseas in January 2008”
make your own decisions folks.
P.S. just noticed that there’s a new Finance and Investing article and it encourages people to buy precious metals stocks. We’ll see who’s right and who’s wrong.
-
February 12, 2008 at 1:23 PM #152523
Eugene
Participanthttp://in.reuters.com/article/businessNews/idINIndia-31896320080212
“India’s gold imports in January slumped to just five tonnes from 62 tonnes in the same month a year ago as a surge in prices saps demand in the world’s largest consumer …
“There is almost zero demand. From 62 tonnes gold imports in January last year, only five tonnes were brought from overseas in January 2008”
make your own decisions folks.
P.S. just noticed that there’s a new Finance and Investing article and it encourages people to buy precious metals stocks. We’ll see who’s right and who’s wrong.
-
February 12, 2008 at 1:23 PM #152595
Eugene
Participanthttp://in.reuters.com/article/businessNews/idINIndia-31896320080212
“India’s gold imports in January slumped to just five tonnes from 62 tonnes in the same month a year ago as a surge in prices saps demand in the world’s largest consumer …
“There is almost zero demand. From 62 tonnes gold imports in January last year, only five tonnes were brought from overseas in January 2008”
make your own decisions folks.
P.S. just noticed that there’s a new Finance and Investing article and it encourages people to buy precious metals stocks. We’ll see who’s right and who’s wrong.
-
-
February 5, 2008 at 7:52 PM #148821
hipmatt
ParticipantGold is just beginning. As the USA prints more money, slashes rates, and the returns on investments diminish, look for the dollar to weaken further and gold to continue up. If the correction continues I will buy more of it. Dollars will be worth much less and the only thing I see as inevitable is massive inflation.
-
February 5, 2008 at 7:52 PM #148838
hipmatt
ParticipantGold is just beginning. As the USA prints more money, slashes rates, and the returns on investments diminish, look for the dollar to weaken further and gold to continue up. If the correction continues I will buy more of it. Dollars will be worth much less and the only thing I see as inevitable is massive inflation.
-
February 5, 2008 at 7:52 PM #148850
hipmatt
ParticipantGold is just beginning. As the USA prints more money, slashes rates, and the returns on investments diminish, look for the dollar to weaken further and gold to continue up. If the correction continues I will buy more of it. Dollars will be worth much less and the only thing I see as inevitable is massive inflation.
-
February 5, 2008 at 7:52 PM #148923
hipmatt
ParticipantGold is just beginning. As the USA prints more money, slashes rates, and the returns on investments diminish, look for the dollar to weaken further and gold to continue up. If the correction continues I will buy more of it. Dollars will be worth much less and the only thing I see as inevitable is massive inflation.
-
-
February 5, 2008 at 4:42 PM #148795
anxvariety
ParticipantIt costs that much because someone on the market is willing to pay that much for it.
WOW!! That’s amazing!
-
February 5, 2008 at 4:42 PM #148813
anxvariety
ParticipantIt costs that much because someone on the market is willing to pay that much for it.
WOW!! That’s amazing!
-
February 5, 2008 at 4:42 PM #148825
anxvariety
ParticipantIt costs that much because someone on the market is willing to pay that much for it.
WOW!! That’s amazing!
-
February 5, 2008 at 4:42 PM #148898
anxvariety
ParticipantIt costs that much because someone on the market is willing to pay that much for it.
WOW!! That’s amazing!
-
February 12, 2008 at 2:17 PM #152257
gold_dredger_phd
ParticipantGold is a commodity that is not also someone’s liability. It is also an insurance policy. You should always keep some just to be prepared for a hyperinflation.
Instead of gold, I would recommend some junk 90% silver coins as a hedge against bad times. It’s more divisible than gold and has smaller denominations.
Trade gold for silver and buy an electric car. Power is the last thing that goes out when civilization collapses. You may not be able to buy gas, but I bet that the power will stay on.
-
February 12, 2008 at 2:33 PM #152262
nostradamus
ParticipantLearn how to make bio-diesel!
-
February 12, 2008 at 2:39 PM #152277
blahblahblah
ParticipantTrade gold for silver and buy an electric car. Power is the last thing that goes out when civilization collapses. You may not be able to buy gas, but I bet that the power will stay on.
Learn how to make bio-diesel!
Speaking of these topics, in the car this morning I realized that someone needs to make a turbo-diesel plug-in hybrid car. Turbo diesels get great gas mileage and can run off of biodiesel. The hybrid technology would extend the mileage even further, and the plug-in option could make it totally electric for short trips. Why isn’t there one of these out there yet? I’d buy one if I could π
Oh, as for gold who knows. We are in uncharted waters here, folks. The country owes trillions of bucks to everyone else, we don’t make anything anymore except weapons, and we’re printing money like it’s going out of style. On the flip side, war is always good for business (at least the weapons business) and the rest of the world needs us to buy their crap. I think we’re headed for a worldwide inflationary scenario as the central banks get in a printing contest with each other. Will gold go up? Maybe but of course who’s going to buy it when everyone is broke…
-
February 12, 2008 at 2:39 PM #152547
blahblahblah
ParticipantTrade gold for silver and buy an electric car. Power is the last thing that goes out when civilization collapses. You may not be able to buy gas, but I bet that the power will stay on.
Learn how to make bio-diesel!
Speaking of these topics, in the car this morning I realized that someone needs to make a turbo-diesel plug-in hybrid car. Turbo diesels get great gas mileage and can run off of biodiesel. The hybrid technology would extend the mileage even further, and the plug-in option could make it totally electric for short trips. Why isn’t there one of these out there yet? I’d buy one if I could π
Oh, as for gold who knows. We are in uncharted waters here, folks. The country owes trillions of bucks to everyone else, we don’t make anything anymore except weapons, and we’re printing money like it’s going out of style. On the flip side, war is always good for business (at least the weapons business) and the rest of the world needs us to buy their crap. I think we’re headed for a worldwide inflationary scenario as the central banks get in a printing contest with each other. Will gold go up? Maybe but of course who’s going to buy it when everyone is broke…
-
February 12, 2008 at 2:39 PM #152551
blahblahblah
ParticipantTrade gold for silver and buy an electric car. Power is the last thing that goes out when civilization collapses. You may not be able to buy gas, but I bet that the power will stay on.
Learn how to make bio-diesel!
Speaking of these topics, in the car this morning I realized that someone needs to make a turbo-diesel plug-in hybrid car. Turbo diesels get great gas mileage and can run off of biodiesel. The hybrid technology would extend the mileage even further, and the plug-in option could make it totally electric for short trips. Why isn’t there one of these out there yet? I’d buy one if I could π
Oh, as for gold who knows. We are in uncharted waters here, folks. The country owes trillions of bucks to everyone else, we don’t make anything anymore except weapons, and we’re printing money like it’s going out of style. On the flip side, war is always good for business (at least the weapons business) and the rest of the world needs us to buy their crap. I think we’re headed for a worldwide inflationary scenario as the central banks get in a printing contest with each other. Will gold go up? Maybe but of course who’s going to buy it when everyone is broke…
-
February 12, 2008 at 2:39 PM #152573
blahblahblah
ParticipantTrade gold for silver and buy an electric car. Power is the last thing that goes out when civilization collapses. You may not be able to buy gas, but I bet that the power will stay on.
Learn how to make bio-diesel!
Speaking of these topics, in the car this morning I realized that someone needs to make a turbo-diesel plug-in hybrid car. Turbo diesels get great gas mileage and can run off of biodiesel. The hybrid technology would extend the mileage even further, and the plug-in option could make it totally electric for short trips. Why isn’t there one of these out there yet? I’d buy one if I could π
Oh, as for gold who knows. We are in uncharted waters here, folks. The country owes trillions of bucks to everyone else, we don’t make anything anymore except weapons, and we’re printing money like it’s going out of style. On the flip side, war is always good for business (at least the weapons business) and the rest of the world needs us to buy their crap. I think we’re headed for a worldwide inflationary scenario as the central banks get in a printing contest with each other. Will gold go up? Maybe but of course who’s going to buy it when everyone is broke…
-
February 12, 2008 at 2:39 PM #152652
blahblahblah
ParticipantTrade gold for silver and buy an electric car. Power is the last thing that goes out when civilization collapses. You may not be able to buy gas, but I bet that the power will stay on.
Learn how to make bio-diesel!
Speaking of these topics, in the car this morning I realized that someone needs to make a turbo-diesel plug-in hybrid car. Turbo diesels get great gas mileage and can run off of biodiesel. The hybrid technology would extend the mileage even further, and the plug-in option could make it totally electric for short trips. Why isn’t there one of these out there yet? I’d buy one if I could π
Oh, as for gold who knows. We are in uncharted waters here, folks. The country owes trillions of bucks to everyone else, we don’t make anything anymore except weapons, and we’re printing money like it’s going out of style. On the flip side, war is always good for business (at least the weapons business) and the rest of the world needs us to buy their crap. I think we’re headed for a worldwide inflationary scenario as the central banks get in a printing contest with each other. Will gold go up? Maybe but of course who’s going to buy it when everyone is broke…
-
-
February 12, 2008 at 2:33 PM #152532
nostradamus
ParticipantLearn how to make bio-diesel!
-
February 12, 2008 at 2:33 PM #152536
nostradamus
ParticipantLearn how to make bio-diesel!
-
February 12, 2008 at 2:33 PM #152558
nostradamus
ParticipantLearn how to make bio-diesel!
-
February 12, 2008 at 2:33 PM #152634
nostradamus
ParticipantLearn how to make bio-diesel!
-
-
February 12, 2008 at 2:17 PM #152527
gold_dredger_phd
ParticipantGold is a commodity that is not also someone’s liability. It is also an insurance policy. You should always keep some just to be prepared for a hyperinflation.
Instead of gold, I would recommend some junk 90% silver coins as a hedge against bad times. It’s more divisible than gold and has smaller denominations.
Trade gold for silver and buy an electric car. Power is the last thing that goes out when civilization collapses. You may not be able to buy gas, but I bet that the power will stay on.
-
February 12, 2008 at 2:17 PM #152531
gold_dredger_phd
ParticipantGold is a commodity that is not also someone’s liability. It is also an insurance policy. You should always keep some just to be prepared for a hyperinflation.
Instead of gold, I would recommend some junk 90% silver coins as a hedge against bad times. It’s more divisible than gold and has smaller denominations.
Trade gold for silver and buy an electric car. Power is the last thing that goes out when civilization collapses. You may not be able to buy gas, but I bet that the power will stay on.
-
February 12, 2008 at 2:17 PM #152553
gold_dredger_phd
ParticipantGold is a commodity that is not also someone’s liability. It is also an insurance policy. You should always keep some just to be prepared for a hyperinflation.
Instead of gold, I would recommend some junk 90% silver coins as a hedge against bad times. It’s more divisible than gold and has smaller denominations.
Trade gold for silver and buy an electric car. Power is the last thing that goes out when civilization collapses. You may not be able to buy gas, but I bet that the power will stay on.
-
February 12, 2008 at 2:17 PM #152628
gold_dredger_phd
ParticipantGold is a commodity that is not also someone’s liability. It is also an insurance policy. You should always keep some just to be prepared for a hyperinflation.
Instead of gold, I would recommend some junk 90% silver coins as a hedge against bad times. It’s more divisible than gold and has smaller denominations.
Trade gold for silver and buy an electric car. Power is the last thing that goes out when civilization collapses. You may not be able to buy gas, but I bet that the power will stay on.
-
April 1, 2008 at 6:41 AM #179107
Anonymous
GuestInvesting In Gold 2008 Learn About the Five Reasons You Should Own Gold in 2008 I did click here and get free information and pricing like I did a few months ago when it was lower. They give free information so click this link and fill out your name and get a free catalog of all type of gold and silver coins catalog.
-
April 1, 2008 at 6:41 AM #179473
Anonymous
GuestInvesting In Gold 2008 Learn About the Five Reasons You Should Own Gold in 2008 I did click here and get free information and pricing like I did a few months ago when it was lower. They give free information so click this link and fill out your name and get a free catalog of all type of gold and silver coins catalog.
-
April 1, 2008 at 6:41 AM #179478
Anonymous
GuestInvesting In Gold 2008 Learn About the Five Reasons You Should Own Gold in 2008 I did click here and get free information and pricing like I did a few months ago when it was lower. They give free information so click this link and fill out your name and get a free catalog of all type of gold and silver coins catalog.
-
April 1, 2008 at 6:41 AM #179490
Anonymous
GuestInvesting In Gold 2008 Learn About the Five Reasons You Should Own Gold in 2008 I did click here and get free information and pricing like I did a few months ago when it was lower. They give free information so click this link and fill out your name and get a free catalog of all type of gold and silver coins catalog.
-
April 1, 2008 at 6:41 AM #179566
Anonymous
GuestInvesting In Gold 2008 Learn About the Five Reasons You Should Own Gold in 2008 I did click here and get free information and pricing like I did a few months ago when it was lower. They give free information so click this link and fill out your name and get a free catalog of all type of gold and silver coins catalog.
-
-
AuthorPosts
- You must be logged in to reply to this topic.