Sep 17, 2011

Apmex pay gold bar to Donald Trumph

A business that began as a booth in an Edmond antiques mall has leased 10,000 square feet of office space on Wall Street, and paid its security deposit in gold bullion. American Precious Metals Exchange, formerly known as Edmond Coins, presented its new landlord Donald Trump with three 1-kilogram gold bars as a deposit on the company's commercial lease for the 50th floor of 40 Wall Street, a 70-story skyscraper in Manhattan's Financial District that once was the world's tallest building.

Donald Trumph Gold


Gold recently has been selling for nearly $1,800 an ounce, making Trump's three gold bars worth about $170,000. American Precious Metals Exchange is based in the former Federal Reserve Bank branch in downtown Oklahoma City. The company, also known as APMEX, will take occupancy of its Wall Street office in about 90 days, and plans to have 25 employees at the site initially, with an option to increase space to accommodate as many as 200. Finance and marketing staff will work in New York, while the company's distribution headquarters will remain in Oklahoma City, the firm said. Read More.
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Gold as part of your portfolio

If you do want gold as part of your portfolio, choose 'investment modes' like coins, bars or paper gold like egold, ETFs. They have zero or very little loads and fees. The next question obviously is about how much gold you should hold in your portfolio. After the huge rally in gold prices in the past few years, it might be tempting to allocate a large part of your portfolio in gold. But that, experts say, is detrimental to long term wealth creation. Why do they say that?

Gold as part of your portfolio


The reason: Gold has no intrinsic value. That is, the value or price of gold is just what people perceive to be the value (or crudely put, prices are driven by speculation and ironically demand from India and China plays a large part in that speculation). The price is not based on future cash flows or earnings potential. In the recent past, the perceived value of the dollar is dropping; hence the value of gold is rising. Secondly, gold has no utility value or intermediate cash flows either; it is just kept idly in lockers with no inflows like dividend or rent. That is not the case in assets like bank deposits or equities. In the case of bank deposits, the deposits are deployed in business by way of loans and the loans are used to generate income. In the case of equities too, the funds raised from primary market are used in a business and the business generates real profits and cash flows in the long term. Long term valuations of share prices are based on these fundamentals. Finally, money needs to be deployed to create more money. Money locked up in gold, cannot in itself, generate more money for extended periods of time.

Why are people currently buying gold and driving up prices then? For countries with global reserves, there is no real alternative to the dollar, hence the shift to gold as safe haven. Institutional investors are probably holding gold till there is clarity on where the world economy is headed. Once the clouds lift, they will get back to putting their money in core businesses and economies. After that, the price of gold might just plateau for a long time, like it did for the 20 years between 1982 to 2003. But how long that will take, nobody knows.

Having said that, it’s true, gold is indeed a safe haven; good to have in your portfolio. Gold has no credit risk and is highly liquid. In bad times, you can fall back on gold for sure. Just don’t go overboard; make sure your portfolio is well diversified for long term wealth creation. And make sure your gold is not in jewellery.Read More.
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Why Indian buy many Gold?

Do you know why Indian buy many gold? Gold in India has traditionally been a form of Stree Dhan, a security that a woman gets from her parents and passes on to her daughters. My grandmother would give a little money every month to her jeweller and when it had saved up to something meaningful, she would have a little trinket made or necklace ordered for her daughters. Over time, while the tradition has continued, it has also become a mark of social status. It continues to remain one of the highly 'socially regarded' asset classes (next to real estate perhaps) and perhaps much of its appeal comes from its power of display.

Indian gold


It is only in the last 4-5 years that gold has earned a reputation of ‘high return asset.’ And somehow, we tend to believe gold prices are always going to keep going up (we'll see this a little later in this post). Now the problem is that gold jewellery is among the worst forms of 'investing' in gold. Gold jewellery is expensive as an investment. In gold jewellery, what you pay for buying the jewellery includes the costs of making the jewellery. When you go to sell the piece, some costs of melting are deducted by the jeweler. All these costs can take away up to 30% of your gains, thereby taking away much of the sheen from gold investments.

So at best, our reasons for buying gold continue to be dominated by the reasons mentioned above, more than any global economic anticipation.Read More.
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Sep 16, 2011

Hellenistic Gold auction by Roma Numismatics

Second public auction of Ancient Coins on 2 October will feature a unique gold coin of the enigmatic Greco-Baktrian ruler Sophytes, issued in the wake of the collapse of Alexander The Great’s empire, which may represent the very first gold issue of the Hellenistic period. Having been published several times and publicly exhibited at the Henri-Prades (Lattes) Museum in France, it will now be offered for sale for the first time. It will be on display at Roma Numismatics’ offices on Hanover Square until 01 October before going under the hammer at the Cavendish Hotel London where it is estimated to realise £200,000.

Richard Beale, Director of Roma Numismatics: “This coin is extremely important for the advancement of our knowledge of ancient Baktria, and represents a very exciting issue in the context of Greek coinage as a whole. We expect it to generate significant interest both at the pre-auction viewing and on the day itself, especially given the buoyant nature of the market for ancient coins at present. This is in part due to the increased awareness of the availability of this ancient art form, and because they are seen as a hedge against turbulence in other markets and are an attractive investment to many that can frequently bring high returns.”


Hellenistic Gold Coin


The identity and origin of Sophytes has been the subject of much debate since the discovery of the first coin bearing his name in 1866. While it has been suggested that he was a Greek mercenary captain, it is more likely that he was a Greco-Indian king, as was reported in the Bibliotheca of Diodorus Siculus, with a capital at Baktra, in modern-day Afghanistan. Osmund Bopearachchi, a director of research at the French National Centre for Scientific Research, argues in ‘Le Portrait d’Alexandre le Grand’ that Sophytes’ gold coinage must have been struck before the Greek Seleukid campaign against the Indian king Chandragupta, and that they are the coins of a powerful and independent ruler in this most eastern part of the Greek world.

The circumstances of this issue may lie hidden in the turmoil of the years following Alexander’s death and the fracture of his empire. A man such as Sophytes would have stood to gain much in this time of conflict and opportunity, and throughout the period of 316-305 BC there are no surviving records regarding the satrapy of Baktria. It has therefore been suggested that it was in this time when Seleukos, one of Alexander’s generals and successors, was campaigning to regain the lost eastern provinces, that Sophytes seized power and struck his series of gold and silver coinage, and that furthermore it is also possible that Seleukos’ campaign also had as one of its many goals, the removal of this rebel upstart.

While the facts of Sophytes life and identity may forever remain unknown to us, this coin is nevertheless of great historical and numismatic interest. The fact that this coin represents certainly one of the earliest, or indeed very possibly the first ever issue of a gold Hellenistic coin, is sure to draw the interest of collectors around the world.Read More.
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India ICICI Bank cheats Gold Coin sales

Beware! If you have purchased or planning to purchase GOLD coins from ICICI Bank, India be watchful!!! Normally people who buys/plans to buy gold from ICICI are supposed to be elite customers who do business with them on trust. We take it for granted with the belief that banks like ICICI is trust worthy! NEVER TAKE ANYTHING FOR GRANTED! PLEASE CHECK OUT!! They never mention PER GRAM price on their invoice or seldom give you an invoice when you buy gold coins.

India ICICI Bank logo


Now let me tell you how we got cheated! My wife has been purchasing gold coins from local gold merchants. When I heard about ICICI bank selling gold, I asked my wife to buy it from them since I thought they would be more trust worthy. We never checked their price and have been purchasing since last one year. When he heared the gold price was going so high, I asked my wife to note down the price during her last purchase in November, 2005. To our surprise, we found that they were taking a margin of over Rs 100 per gram over the market price. To be specific, the market price of 99.99% gold on 14th November 2005 was $469.75 per ounce in the international market and Rs 705.50 per gram in Indian market. However, they charged us Rs 813.36 per gram for 50 gram coin, Rs 839.19 per gram for 8 gram coin and Rs 921.91 per gram for 2.5 gram coin!!!! These prices are exclusive of Sales Tax. Now you get an idea about how ICICI Bank loots its customers! If anyone want more detail or documentary proof, please contact me.
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Scoin Shop success story

Alan Demby bought his first kruggerands in 1977, paying £50 each for three of the 1oz gold coins that were first produced by the South African Mint in 1967. Today, a kruggerand will set you back £1,200-£1,300, and Demby owns almost 30 gold coin shops throughout South Africa as well as three in the UK.

At the opening of his latest Scoin Shop store at the new Westfield Stratford City mall, Demby said the range of coins he sells will appeal to the same type of collector that frequents his South African stores: 50-plus men who are typically self-employed.

Scoin Shop

"Gold does seem to be the money of dictators," he jokes, "but in reality the coins we sell appeal to collectors rather than investors. There are probably about 20 million coin collectors in the world and they tend to be your average man in the street.

"When we opened our first store we thought it would be tourists who would come in, looking to take back some South African gold from their holiday, but it was locals who found it interesting."

The most expensive sale Demby has made in his 40-year career was for a £1.2m set of coins, but the Stratford store has a range of items for those with shallower pockets, with prices starting £150. On the day I visit, the store is also displaying a £63,000 coin to commemorate the Queen's 60th wedding anniversary, and the London 2012 Olympic Games commemorative gold coin collection, struck in 22 carat gold by the Royal Mint.

Anyone opening a gold coin shop in the present climate could face accusations of cashing in on the soaring gold price and taking advantage of guileless consumers who rush to buy the asset just as the bubble looks like bursting.

The price of gold has once again rocketed to record levels, with the spot price hitting $1,921.41 an ounce last week, leading to fears that jittery investors who have swapped the stock market for the precious metal could see their savings decimated if the gold bubble bursts.
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Sep 11, 2011

Some sell while some snatch up gold

Jan Carlan gathered pieces of old jewelry, took them to Cole's Coins and Collectibles in Chester and cashed them in for $800.

"You don't want to act too surprised, but I thought, 'Holy cow, you're going to give me that much for them?' " said Carlan, a Charles City County resident.

"It was just stuff in the jewelry box — a couple of chintzy gold chains, a bent bangle bracelet, a ring I didn't wear anymore, a silver charm bracelet."

She and her husband used the money to stay an extra week at the beach.
buy or sell gold coin

Gold is selling for about $1,860 an ounce, close to record highs of more than $1,900, and up from $255 an ounce 10 years ago.

Silver prices are $42 an ounce, up from about $4.50 an ounce 10 years ago.

As some people rush to cash in on the high prices of gold and silver, others are snatching up gold and silver coins or exchange-traded funds for precious metals as a hedge against inflation.

They are trading in their grandmother's silver tea service for cash or rummaging through garage sales to find and resell silver and gold trinkets, gold dealers say.

Some dealers and retailers say they see a steady stream of consumers bringing in their gold and silver pieces to sell while others are buying for investment purposes.


Investors are adding gold to their portfolios to diversify their assets and protect their assets.

"You have to be very careful about investing in gold," said James A. Cox III, managing partner at Harris Financial Group in Colonial Heights.

"I like the actual coins and pieces of gold that you can carry and spend. But most investors buy gold by owning futures or exchange-traded funds. With these, you are buying the right to buy gold, but you don't own it."

Gold is a small market, but it makes the headlines because of the sharp run-up in prices, Cox said. "What I don't like about gold is it (the price) can rip around quickly."

People perceive gold as safe, but it has its risks, just like any investment, he said.

Precious metals tend to hold their values in inflationary periods, Cox sad. "People are going into gold in droves, not to grow their money but to preserve the purchasing power of their money."

Unlike paper currency, which the government continues to print, there is only a finite amount of gold and silver, he said.

Cox recommends that investors put no more than 5 to 7 percent of their portfolios into gold. "Over-allocating to it is a bad idea. It could be disastrous to one's financial future. … The thing that worries me the most about gold is, people are buying it because they think it will go up."Read More.
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Taxes will increase due to coin value

Taxes are due on any increase in the coins' value. The reality is that if it's a modest amount of money, most people will overlook it, and I can't imagine the government making a "federal case" about it. However, the taxes technically are due whether or not you wish to follow through.


gold coin value


If you give the coins to your grandchildren or children and keep the current value at under $13,000 a year per person, there will be no taxes due on the transaction. Once again, the children and grandchildren will be responsible for any increase in value over the value when the exchange took place. And if there are only a few coins staying in the family, I wouldn't lose a lot of sleep over it.

A number of coin buyers across the country would be very happy to purchase the sets.

However, they are going to offer you the wholesale value, which is appropriate given they will have to sell at retail to make a profit. You could also sell your coins on eBay or Craigslist. One problem is that you may have to meet the buyers, and that could expose you to being taken advantage of. Given the relatively small transaction, I would deal with a coin dealer who has been around for some time and enjoys a good reputation. Read More.
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Sep 10, 2011

RCMP 99999 Gold bullion coins

"The Royal Canadian Mint is proud to continue offering the world's investors an exciting variety of the world's purest gold and silver bullion coins at a time when bullion demand remains at record levels" said Ian E. Bennett, President and CEO of the Royal Canadian Mint. "Issuing products which stand out in the competitive bullion industry has helped the Mint achieve a reputation as the source of the world's purest and most innovative bullion coins and we are pleased that these new coins continue providing customers our trademark quality and purity."

The reverse of the 2011 99.999% pure gold bullion coin features a Royal Canadian Mounted Police officer riding a horse at full gallop, surrounded by a circle of maple leaves, in a classic 1997 design by former Master Engraver Ago Aarand. Its obverse bears the effigy of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II by Canadian portrait artist Susanna Blunt and a $200 face value.

The reverse design of 2012 "Cougar" silver bullion coin is the work of Senior Mint Engraver William Woodruff and its obverse features the Susanna Blunt effigy of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II. This 99.99% pure silver bullion coin bears a face value of $5.

The "RCMP" 99999 pure Gold Maple Leaf bullion coins and 2012 "Cougar" silver bullion coins will soon be available through the Mint's extensive network of bullion distributors, after shipping begins in September 2011. Read More.
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Largest gold coin mint process video

How do Royal Canadian Mint make the largest gold coins? I think everyone of you knew about the World's largest gold coin; Million-dollar coin by now. Royal Canadian Mint has released a video: Making largest gold coin. In this video, they show how the biggest world coin in the world works process done by their stuff. Its not easy to make a big coin like that and from the video, look like almost all the job are done by hands. For a 100 kilos of gold and a pure 99.999/1000 gold, a careful inspection is a must.

How they are making world largest gold coin video




On May 3, 2007, the Royal Canadian Mint (RCM) unveiled a Gold Maple Leaf coin by artist Stanley Witten, with a face value of $1 million Canadian dollar. The weight of the coin is 100 kilograms, and measures 50 cm in diameter by 3 cm thick. The coin is mainly a promotional product to give the RCM a higher international profile. The 100-kilogram coin was conceived as a showpiece to promote the RCM's new line of 99.999 percent pure, one-ounce gold maple leaf bullion coins.

In June 2010, a piece of this largest gold coin auctioned by Dorotheum auction house for 3.27 million euros ($4.02 million). The auction was ordered by the administrator of Austrian investment group AvW Invest, which filed for insolvency in May after its owner and chief executive was arrested on suspicion of fraud, breach of trust and other charges. the auctioned won by ORO direct, a Spanish precious metals trading company. So far, only 5 of this coins exist; including Queen Elizabeth, who is also displayed on one side of the coin, two unidentified investors in Dubai and one who is so reclusive even his or her residence is unknown. Read More.
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Mystery of Double Eagles

The most valuable coin in the world sits in the lobby of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York in lower Manhattan. It’s Exhibit 18E, secured in a bulletproof glass case with an alarm system and an armed guard nearby. The 1933 Double Eagle, considered one of the rarest and most beautiful coins in America, has a face value of $20—and a market value of $7.6 million. It was among the last batch of gold coins ever minted by the U.S. government. The coins were never issued; most of the nearly 500,000 cast were melted down to bullion in 1937.


Most, but not all. Some of the coins slipped out of the Philadelphia Mint before then. No one knows for sure exactly how they got out or even how many got out. The U.S. Secret Service, responsible for protecting the nation’s currency, has been pursuing them for nearly 70 years, through 13 Administrations and 12 different directors. The investigation has spanned three continents and involved some of the most famous coin collectors in the world, a confidential informant, a playboy king, and a sting operation at the Waldorf Astoria in Manhattan. It has inspired two novels, two nonfiction books, and a television documentary. And much of it has centered around a coin dealer, dead since 1990, whose shop is still open in South Philadelphia, run by his 82-year-old daughter.

“The 1933 Double Eagle is one of the most intriguing coins of all time,” says Jay Brahin, an investment adviser who has been collecting coins since he was a kid in Philadelphia. “It’s a freak. The coins shouldn’t have been minted, but they were. They weren’t meant to circulate, but some did. And why has the government pursued them so arduously? That’s one of the mysteries.” Read More.
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Indians shift buying bangles to bars

Daniel's wife owns at least a kilogram of jewellery and he sports a gold watch. But he is also shrewd enough to realise that the world's biggest gold consumers are falling out of love with wearing their wealth, preferring to stock up on coins, bars and bullion-based investment funds as they look for returns safe from the ravages of inflation and the dictates of fashion.

"The current generation is not serious about gold. They have bangles but they don't wear them," Daniel, of Shreyas Investment Services, told Reuters in his basement office, after wrapping up an offer to clients of the SBI Gold Fund as an investment.


"Look at college campuses, Indian girls there are not interested in gold jewellery. My wife has about one kilo of gold jewellery but my daughters are not interested."

Demand for gold bars, coins and other pure investments in India, Asia's third largest economy, soared 83 percent in 2010 from the year earlier to 349 tonnes, according to GFMS, a precious metals consultancy that is part of Thomson Reuters.

The amount of gold used in making jewellery in 2010 rose 36 percent to 685 tonnes -- giving investment demand 34 percent of total buying, up from 28 percent in 2009.

"Gold has come a long way from being a jewellery item to an alternative currency," said Gnanasekar Thiagarajan, a director with Commtrendz Research.

"Investment demand could surpass jewellery demand in the next two to three years," he said. Read More.
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Ghost of Goldcorp still haunts us

Few bullion dealers are prepared to admit it, but the ghost of Goldcorp still haunts the local bullion trade. More than 20 years after Goldcorp collapsed, some Kiwis are still wary of having a fling with the bling, while others won't trust anything that looks like a piece of paper instead of the real thing.

The public perception, which seems to have stuck, is that when the receivers opened Goldcorp's vaults in 1988, they found a huge amount of gold missing. Wild rumours quickly circulated about its flamboyant founder, Ray Smith, loading up fancy cars with gold bars.


In the book he later wrote about the saga, Where's the Gold?, Smith argued that it was in fact his bank, the BNZ, that depleted his gold stocks and at whom the 1600 investors who lost their money should direct their anger. He also suggested that it was the merger of the Auckland Coin and Bullion Exchange with a private property company that was the real reason for Goldcorp's demise. Read More.
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Gold Coins still allure some people

On the international commodity markets, gold is traded in US dollars. At the end of 2001, it was priced at $276 per ounce; this week it was trading at more than $1,800 per ounce.

On Thursday, the Financial Times reported a prediction by Swiss bank UBS that the price would reach $2,075 per ounce next year. But could gold become another bubble? Caveat emptor.

Dublin auctioneer John Weldon, who specialises in antique jewellery, silver and gold, said, “The price of a gold sovereign coin has risen from about €55 10 years ago to about €270 today.”

He is marking 10 years in business, during which he has sold about 48,000 lots, with an anniversary auction next Tuesday, September 13th, at 2pm in his saleroom at Cow’s Lane, Temple Bar, in Dublin city centre.

Lots include a selection of gold coins and several pieces of gold jewellery including an Albert chain made of 15 carat gold (€700-€900). (The Albert chain, named after Queen Victoria’s husband has a T-bar, usually a fob drop and two chains with watch swivels.) There is also an American $10 gold coin dated 1879 (€400-€600) and a gold guinea dated 1795 (€250-€350). Read More.
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Strike gold with pre-decimal silver

Do you have some old shillings and half crowns stashed away in boxes or bottles? They might be worth rather more than you thought.

The rocketing price of silver (it has doubled over the past year) means that coins minted before 1947 – which had real silver in them – are now worth 40 times their face value. Dealers will give you £1 for a sixpenny bit, popularly known as a "tanner" which, on decimalisation in 1971, turned from a 6d into 2½p coin. The old shilling coin, which became the 5p piece, is now worth £2 – actually beating the rate of inflation since 1971.


Unfortunately, "silver" coins minted after 1947 contain no silver and are worth no more than their face value. A reader recently contacted us after helping an elderly friend declutter her home and coming across a 2kg box of pre-decimal English coins, mostly small denomination coppers and silver coins from the 50s and 60s. In an age where we are encouraged to recycle, and where thousands of "more mature" people are likely to have old coins gathering dust, what, she asked, can be done with them? Read More.
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Lucy Hayes First Spouse Gold Coin

The United States Mint will begin accepting orders for the Lucy Hayes First Spouse Gold Coin and Bronze Medal on September 1, 2011, at noon Eastern Time ( ET ). Both proof and uncirculated versions of the 24-karat gold coin will be available.

The coin's obverse ( heads side ) was designed by United States Mint Artistic Infusion Program Master Designer Susan Gamble and sculpted by United States Mint Sculptor-Engraver Don Everhart. The design features the likeness of Lucy Hayes with the inscriptions LUCY HAYES, IN GOD WE TRUST, LIBERTY, 2011, 19th and 1877-1881. The coin's reverse ( tails side ) was designed by United States Mint Artistic Infusion Program Associate Designer Barbara Fox and sculpted by United States Mint Sculptor-Engraver Joseph Menna. The design represents Lucy Hayes' participation in the first Easter Egg Roll held at the White House. Inscriptions are UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, E PLURIBUS UNUM, $10, 1/2 OZ. and .9999 FINE GOLD. Read more at: usmint.gov
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9 September Coin Scam Alert

9 september coin scam


The United States Mint had issued a 9/11 coin scam warning following a product by National Collector's Mint; "10th Anniversary September 11th Commemorative Dollar" and claims that it is a "Liberian government authorized legal tender coin." US Mint warned users that this product is not a genuine United States coin or medal. Under the Constitution, Congress has the exclusive power to coin money of the United States. Congress has delegated its authority to mint and issue coins to the Secretary of Treasury, and Congress requires the Secretary to carry out these duties at the United States Mint. Thus, the United States Mint is the only government entity in the United States with the authority to coin money. Read More
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