D_W":1umkzg1u said:
he's guessing and taking advice from people who are not smart enough to invest in the open market and leave their investments alone until they want to spend them.
Pretty much anyone is guessing though, aren't they?
There are informed guesses, perhaps, but it's still guessing - If it weren't, experienced investors wouldn't still be losing so much money on their investments. Others advise investing by buying actual gold over merely investing 'in gold', because it's more stable and subject to fewer influences.
Could be worse - It could be BitCoin!!
shed9":1umkzg1u said:
All bullion coinage is sold at premium even if at a small percentage. What business model could sustain manufacture, administration, authority, storage and logistics at the base price of the material used? Anything in the precious metals market that is certified comes at premium.
Yes, everything has a premium that the companies apply (currently about 4%, it seems), both reduction in buying from you and increase in selling to you... But for the average person on the street, it is a 1oz piece of gold and as a benchmark it is worth (near enough) whatever the ounce value is of that gold.
Even Proof Krugerrands are valued at £1250-odd and that's maybe a 20% premium.
The premium is a given, though, just like postage & packing and can be assumed a feature of transacting, but does not form part of the actual value of the item itself.
The difference in collecting versus merely using is where people pay well over the market value for something.
For instance, I could buy a plain black t-shirt for a tenner. It's worth a tenner and that's it... but if I get it worn by Brad Pitt for one short 20-second scene in a movie - The actual value does not change, but collectors will pay well over $1,000 for it.
shed9":1umkzg1u said:
Clearly this is investment and specifically pushes RSA gold, hence the Kruger / Rand aspect. I think we agree there so not sure what your retort was meant to achieve?
No investor is going to pay the collector price of £1900 for a Proof Krugerrand that is only valued at £1200.
That was the point.
shed9":1umkzg1u said:
Limited / proof runs of coins hold value for these very reasons. I fail to see how you can differentiate a user from a collector when both end products have a defined and reliable value within the same market.
To the collector, an item may be worth a lot, but also collectors items are usually only worth that to a collector.
To everyone else, it's worth the basic value, which is usually substantially less.
This is why I cited a niche-market 'collectors' car earlier - Most people would pay maybe £500 for the rotting pile of junk parked outside my mate's garage, because that's all it's market-valued at, while a collector might pay as much as £11,000.
Collector prices are more like auction prices, when comparing them to the actual value. This is why I cited the Router Plane, although it seems Aldi Chisels are just as good - They're worth £8. You can buy them yourself. But slap on "As recommended by Paul Sellers" in your auction title, you can up the price by more than three times, because collectors will buy that.
bugbear":1umkzg1u said:
On the assumption that "other coins of 1Oz gold are available", the collectors won't be distorting the user market, since to a user, all certified 1Oz blobs of gold are interchangeable.
The trouble is that, because collectors will pay that much and so dealers can make more, gold coins will rise in sales price.