A Gold trading Tip
August 21, 2012 2 Comments
Here is a bit of traditional wisdom:
Gold generally trades in the lower range around March and July. Generally, this is the best time to buy gold and marriage season is the best time to sell gold.
For Whom Wealth Matters
August 21, 2012 2 Comments
Here is a bit of traditional wisdom:
Gold generally trades in the lower range around March and July. Generally, this is the best time to buy gold and marriage season is the best time to sell gold.
Filed under Precious Metals, Tool Kit Tagged with best time to buy gold, best time to sell gold, Bullion, buy gold, Gold, gold coin, gold investing, Gold Investment, gold rates, gold trading, postaday, sell gold
August 18, 2012 4 Comments
In 1933, the President of the United States of America, Franklin D. Roosevelt stopped the coinage of gold and made it illegal to own the metal (although coin collectors could retain their pieces). With one exception, no 1933 double eagles were ever legally released, although some were stolen from the government, and over the years several were recovered.
In the summer of 2002, a 1933 Double Eagle was auctioned off for $7,590,020 , which shattered the old record of $4,140,000 paid at a public auction for an 1804 silver dollar. This piece is unique as the only 1933 double eagle the U.S. government has deemed legal for its citizens to own (having been negotiated as such through terms of a U.S. treaty with a foreign government). Even illegal instances of the 1933 double eagle would be worth hundreds of thousands of dollars, but it would be illegal for a U.S. coin dealer to broker a deal with one of these coins. There is no other date of St. Gaudens double eagle that is worth a significant fraction of this extraordinary coin. In fact, a complete uncirculated set of all other St. Gaudens double eagles could be put together for just over three million dollars (less than half the price paid for the 1933), including the extremely rare, ultra-high relief, proof pattern. Without the rare pattern, the set would be less than $ 750,000. Read more of this post
Filed under Alternative Assets, Precious Metals, Tidbits Tagged with 1934 Gold Reserve Act, André de Clermont, Assay Commission, coin collecting, coin collection, Colonel James Flanagan, Double Eagles, Ernest A. Kehr, Federal Reserve Bank, Gold, gold coin, Gold Investment, gold standard, investing in coins, investing in gold coins, Israel Switt, King Farouk Double Eagle, King Farouk of Egypt, King Farouk's coin collection, Koubbeh Palace in Cairo, Numismatics, Palace Collections of Egypt, Philadelphia Mint, playboy, postaday, Smithsonian National Numismatic Collection, Sotheby's, Stephen Fenton, Trial of the Pyx, Waldorf Astoria
July 20, 2012 2 Comments
Very Interesting!
Filed under Precious Metals Tagged with Bullion, Gold, postaday
June 8, 2012 1 Comment
Check out the cool historical facts!
Filed under Tidbits Tagged with Gold, history of gold, postaday
June 5, 2012 10 Comments
Below is an article from today’s ET.The author has failed to convince me that buying and holding physical gold at current prices is likely to be a good idea in the long term.After all paper currency systems must collapse sometime and gold tends to be around forever.But buying paper gold,especially as part of a blended mutual fund such as a combo of equities,gold and debt might have something going for it.Read the article below and decide for yourself:-
Gold to scale new peaks in coming years: Ritesh Jain, Head of Investments Canara Robeco Asset Management.
It’s a lump of metal with no cash flows and earnings power. The buyer even foregoes gradual accumulation of intrinsic value as it is industrially useless. But just imagine the second-largest economy in the world frantically buying this metal. Read more of this post
![The history of gold [infographic]](http://verkoren.files.wordpress.com/2012/06/gold-history-infographic2_part_1.jpeg?w=630)