• @Hacksaw@lemmy.ca
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    282 years ago

    Not to mention that they’re selling for $2,679.99/oz and the gold spot price is $2,500 right now. You lose 7% just by buying!

    • HubertManne
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      52 years ago

      yes but if the world collapses you could trade that gold bar for a chicken if you needed to.

      • @CADmonkey@lemmy.world
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        2 years ago

        Would you be able to do that? Or would the person with the chickens rather have something more immediately useful like fuel, soap, or feed?

        • HubertManne
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          32 years ago

          yeah so again its really a joke around folks that buy gold for a collapse when it would be better to have something useful and the gold bar can’t be easily subdivided. Im sure gold will be a thing even in a collapse but the modern cost of it is so high it makes no sense in a trade situation.

          • IninewCrow
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            2 years ago

            Which is why all the rich people are buying up land and property … an old farmer friend of mine once told me a long time ago, land is the most important thing to own, there’s only a limited supply, they don’t make it any more and there will always be someone who wants it. Especially when the world comes to an end

            • @prodigalsorcerer@lemmy.ca
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              22 years ago

              In an actual collapse situation, nobody is going to respect property rights. He may have a head start in that he’s familiar with his own land, but there’s only so much land a single person can defend and maintain (and it’s much smaller than even a hobby farm).

              Best case scenario for farmers is that they mostly get left alone, and then someone (everyone) steals their crops just before harvest. It’s unlikely people will have that much foresight, so I expect it’s just going to be a bunch of fighting over farmland, followed by starvation because no one had time to grow anything.

              • IninewCrow
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                12 years ago

                Part of the process is not what you will be left with after the collapse happens. You are right, no one will care about property rights or ownership during and after a collapse.

                Part of the process is in building wealth before the collapse happens. The wealthy are building and hording wealth of all types right now … property, hardware and shelter … while at the same time building monetary wealth that will help them after the fact. Whoever has the most wealth right now or right at the moment of the collapse will be the ones who will survive the longest.

                Those that have little to no wealth right now or at the moment of the collapse will be the first ones fighting some ugly conflicts over food and water while the rich hide in their defended small plots of land.

                The poor will do the fighting and dying among themselves while the rich will sit quietly watching the fireworks from far away.

            • HubertManne
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              22 years ago

              I guess this makes sense if society is holding together well enough but if it is then you can likely sell gold for currency.

        • HubertManne
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          12 years ago

          thats the joke. you manage to find someone to trade you a chicken for gold and another guy trades a book of matches.

      • @Hacksaw@lemmy.ca
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        12 years ago

        … on what planet has gold ever been $2500USD/oz?

        So just so I can understand correctly: you read a comment, get confused about a detail (I thought Canada was metric!), do absolutely zero research, go straight to accusing the person of being wrong?

        Anyways units in Canada are practically an inside joke at this point, here is a flowchart. I suppose we should add a gold path to the mass

        • @GreyEyedGhost@lemmy.ca
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          22 years ago

          While there’s a lot of merit in that chart, precious metals (that aren’t being used industrially) are bought and sold worldwide in Troy ounces, which are heavier than imperial ounces. Also, there are only 12 Troy ounces to the Troy pound, which is lighter than the imperial pound.

          You can buy precious metals in grams in consumer markets (i.e., Costco), but all major markets deal in Troy ounces.

          • @Hacksaw@lemmy.ca
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            22 years ago

            No, stop! You can’t just hand out Lemmy Gold like that, You’ll devalue the currency!

  • @grte@lemmy.caOP
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    132 years ago

    Just in case your personal style is lacking that 19th century rail baron aesthetic you’ve been wanting.

  • @Grimpen@lemmy.ca
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    82 years ago

    I bought 3 x 1 oz. gold wafers from Scotiabank back in 1994 for around $400 IIRC and forgot about them in my safety deposit box. I sold them in 2010 for over $1200 each at one of those “We buy gold!” guys when I was moving for work.

    Technically you can invest in gold without having physical lumps of metal, but it seemed like a thing to do when I was young, didn’t have any expenses, and gold was at a historic low. Of course now that I’m curious, it seems gold is $2500/Oz, so not sure if now is the time to invest. I guess it’s kind of like how crypto-bros said crypto was a hedge against inflation. The cost for actual physical gold wafers included some extra fees even back in the nineties, so Costco’s price above the spot price isn’t too out of line.