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Silver Investment 101


A silver investment can begin with the purchase of a single bar or coin. Where it's from, the design, even the shape doesn't matter. Although counterfeits exist, if it says, ".999 Silver" and "One Troy Ounce," you are almost certainly purchasing the real thing. Unlike other investments, this one can come home with you, can be held, can be looked at, and may travel to foreign countries and redeemed for its full value.

Coin Shops

When you walk into a coin shop, you are surrounded by collectible merchandise of all kinds. Rare items will litter the cases, individually priced and marked up for a hefty profit. Ask the owner to see the "silver rounds." A "round" is another word for a generic coin. If he has any in stock, he will direct you to the case where the items are priced slightly higher than the market price for the metal.

They may not have any silver on hand. Shops get their products from people who come in to sell them. You could be out of luck if no one has sold to them recently. Furthermore, if the market looks volatile, an owner might sell to larger national dealers, or they may sell it to industry, whose demands are typically much greater than those of investors.

Types of Coins

Assuming the shop has items available, they will be broken down into two categories: 1) generic rounds, and 2) numismatic coins.


Generic rounds are the preferred item of choice for investment purchases. You are paying for the silver, not the design or collector's value of the item. This value is dependent directly on the market price of the metal. A numismatic coin like the American Eagle is considered to have collector value. This value is subjective, and while it is a .999 one troy ounce coin, it is worth more than a generic round. The trouble is that a) that value is very tough to pin down, and b) when sold, you need to find a buyer that is willing to pay that amount. A generic round is far easier to sell at a market price that is universally known.
Bullion Bars

In addition to coins, silver may be purchased as bars. One ounce bars may be found alongside generic rounds, and from an investment standpoint, are exactly the same. Some people prefer bars simply for aesthetic reasons.

When purchasing more than one ounce at a time, rounds can be purchased in rolls, or larger bars may be purchased. Again, you will have some success finding these quantities at the local coin shop. Bars typically appear in denominations of one ounce, ten ounces, 100 ounces, or 1000 ounces.

Purchasing Large Amounts

For the serious investor, purchasing $1,000 or more generally requires a national dealer. A search on the internet or in the phone book will turn up many to choose from. Dealers will take bank wires, checks and occasionally credit cards and deliver your order to your doorstep. Some allow you to pick your order up directly from their warehouse if you are lucky enough to live near one.

Shortages

It is not unheard of for even the large national dealers to run out of silver temporarily. The metal has many uses ranging from the computer industry to health care. It is the most conductive metal that exists making it suitable for many electronic applications. When industrial demands run high, very little is left for the investment world.

For this reason, a sudden demand from investors can cause shortages from dealers. Dealers may still take orders, but will not promise shipping for weeks or months. Even worse, they may begin charging a premium to compensate for the high demand, driving the price to 15%-60% more than the market price. Yet, the industrial demand may be steady during periods of high investment demand, keeping the overall spot price unchanged, or even seeing it fall.

Selling

Coin shops again serve as the marketplace when you are ready to sell. They typically will buy at the market price, or slightly lower, usually within 5% of the market price. Occasionally, when investment demand is high, they may give you more than market price.

The same rules apply to the larger dealers. In times of shortage, they will buy through any means necessary including private investors like you. For large quantities, the large dealers likely will pay more than the smaller local shops.

Another option is to sell the through an auction such as eBay. Auction sites tend to give back very good returns and may well beat the price of your local dealer, especially if they do not have competition in your area.

Storage

Like any investment, care should be taken to secure your assets. Think of the metal like a stock certificate. You probably wouldn't leave it lying around the kitchen table with other papers. You'd have it in a safe somewhere. You might consider storage and security as part of your investment. Spend 1% of the value on storage and this will give you a safety deposit box in a bank for your $500 of bullion. As with anything of value, secrecy certainly plays a part in security.

Silver will tarnish when exposed to air. Sulfur causes the metal to turn yellow, then black, and air contains sulfur, especially near areas with high automobile traffic. This does not affect the value of investment rounds or bars, providing that they are not considered numismatic or collectible. For collectible items, this will certainly have an impact on value as a discoloration will impact the aesthetics of the object. Store your bullion in an air-tight container if possible, but don't worry about it too much if you don't have numismatic coins. Discoloration will not affect the value of these items, unless you will be selling to the general public through channels like eBay where the public may pay more for a "pretty" item rather than one that is tarnished. Even in this case, tarnishing will only slightly affect the value.

Hidden Benefits


Can be sold anywhere in the world. It is not tied to one specific nation's currency, so it can be taken out of the U.S. and brought to a local dealer or even banks in many countries. Again, the value comes from the material, not because it has a nation's emblem or amount labeled on it. Portable enough that great amounts of wealth can be transported in a briefcase, a suitcase, a trunk, or a bag. Aesthetically pleasing. Many investors get hooked on the metal itself because of it's luster, it's weight, and the pleasing logos or designs created by the mints that produce the end product. Holding the metal in your hands can become somewhat intoxicating and may increase the desire to invest more and more hard-earned cash to obtain it. Not tied to the dollar. The metal was once tied to the dollar. A one dollar bill in the U.S. once represented a piece of metal in a vault like at Fort Knox (and said so right on the bill). But the Federal Reserve did away with this "restriction" in 1971 in a decision called the "Nixon Shock." Now if the dollar crashes, precious metals still retain their full value. It is disappearing. World industry is finding new uses for the most electrically conductive, the most heat conductive, and the most reflective metal every single day. Photography, electronics, and the medical industry are using the metal at a rate never before seen in history. Much that is used in industry is gone. It is not recycled. It is not recoverable. It is used up and gone forever.
Conclusion

Buying silver is rewarding, practical, and satisfying, is one of the oldest forms of investment, has passed the test of time, and continues to thrive in an environment that finds new industrial uses every day. As the supply runs short in the world, the value continues to rise. Starting a silver investment creates real wealth in your possession to compliment, or take the place of, investments represented by pieces of paper.








Brian A. Brown
Silver investment author and silver investor
http://www.silverinvestment.org


2010 American Silver Eagle

2010 American Silver EagleReleased in 1986, the Silver Eagle is Americas only official investment-grade silver bullion coin. It is also the worlds only silver bullion coin whose weight, content and purity are guaranteed by the U. S. Government. The obverse features Adolph A. Weinmans beautiful walking liberty design originally used on U.S. Silver Half Dollars from 1916 through 1947. The reverse design is John Mercantis rendition of an eagle and shield, symbolic of American strength and pride.

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