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Buy Gold Bullion | Gold bullion: the way to retirement - News Room Magazine | News2Gold

Buy Gold Bullion | <b>Gold bullion</b>: the way to retirement - News Room Magazine | News2Gold


<b>Gold bullion</b>: the way to retirement - News Room Magazine

Posted: 16 Apr 2014 10:11 AM PDT

If you've been doing the math, then simply saving up for your retirement isn't a very good idea. With the ravages of inflation and an unstable economy, combined with a dollar that seems to be devaluating, even if you've been saving steadily all the time, the actual value of your savings – how much it can buy for you when you retire – might be much less than you thought it would be.

That's where learning how to buy gold bullion comes in. by investing in an asset like gold, you can be assured that your savings will have a better chance of meeting your future needs.

Gold IRA

If you want to buy gold bullion, the best way to do it is to set up an IRA, or individual retirement account, first. This way, your 401 (k) funds and other personal savings for retirement can all be consolidated in one account, perfect for asset investments. After you do that, the next step would be to make sure you have an IRA custodian who can facilitate purchases of gold, along with all the attendant costs and expenses that come with it, such as storage and insurance.

One should remember, though, that the important thing about a gold IRA is that you should start as early as possible, so that your return will be larger.

Why Gold?

Purchasing gold bullion may seem a bit excessive, but when you do buy gold bullion, the trick is to know what gold really is. Gold is a finite resource that is also very useful for both aesthetic and technological needs and wants. Therefore, even if its value can go up and down when you look at it on the short-term, once you observe its value across years, even decades, you'll realize that it's always going up. And that means that when you do reach retirement age, the gold you purchased could have even doubled, or tripled, in price. That's much more retirement money to use than if you had simply saved up and put everything in a retirement savings account.

The different kinds of gold bullion

If you are still learning how to buy gold bullion, you should realize that they come in different shapes and sizes. That's a good thing, as you should temper your purchases with how much you can afford to buy, and at the same time, how big your storage unit is. You should also consider that once you choose a type of gold bullion, you should stick with that, so your valuation will be less complicated when the time comes to dispose of them.

Finding the right seller

As it is, the seller's market for gold bullion is never as straightforward as it should be. Your first job is to see which one has the most transparent pricing system – and that means they should also be including miscellaneous costs and fees into the price. At the same time, you should also look for proper accreditation that can be confirmed, before you do buy gold bullion from them.

DatSyn News - Safely <b>Buy Gold</b> Online - <b>Bullion</b> Direct by Free <b>Gold</b> <b>...</b>

Posted: 14 Apr 2014 08:25 PM PDT

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Download – http://bit.ly/1ej5Dnf

Safely Buy Gold Online – Bullion Direct by Free Gold Savings – Read more:

Online commodity trading online is a risk as well as lucrative business. Many big trading companies use gold as their currency and make a lot of money on the online trading platforms. So there is a lot of gold that buyer can buy online but you need to be sure how you can Safely Buy Gold Online. That is the one aspect of online gold buying. The other aspect is that many gold mines are putting their gold online and advertising for purchasers to buy their gold. In order to safe online buying a lot of checks need to be done to establish if the product is in fact real and if the product in fact exists. The checking requires a lot of work as the owner of the goods need to engage with certain authorities in order to check and very the goods.

Read more:


Is There Any <b>Gold</b> Left For Central Banks To <b>Buy</b>? - <b>Bullion</b> Bulls <b>...</b>

Posted: 31 Mar 2014 10:53 AM PDT

Articles & Blogs - Gold Commentary

Here is a conundrum for readers to unravel. Throughout 2011, 2012, and early into 2013; central banks in Eastern and Emerging Market nations went on the largest (official) gold-buying binge in history. This occurred as the currencies of these nations were relatively stable, and thus "inflation" pressures were relatively muted.

Now flash-forward to early 2014. We have what the mainstream propaganda machine is calling "the crises in Emerging Market currencies" (versus all the currencies of the corrupt, Western bloc). Let's put aside the fact that the "collapse" of these currencies is just another mega-crime from the One Bank – committed while its banker-felons are currently being investigated for serial currency-manipulation.

Forgetting about the cause of this "collapse", the effect of this plunge in the value of these nations' currencies is a spike in the rate of inflation. In other words; whatever was the precise motivation for these central banks to begin their gold-buying binge, those motivations would be stronger today. Yet despite a stronger motive, their gold-buying has practically screeched to a halt.

The analogy here is a simple one. As summer begins (and people get thirsty), lemonade sales increase significantly. Yet just as a heat-wave arrives (and people are presumably even thirstier), lemonade sales suddenly collapse. There are only two plausible reasons which immediately assert themselves in this hypothetical scenario. Either the lemonade customers have no more funds to purchase lemonade, or the lemonade-makers have no more lemonade to sell.

Relating this conundrum back to the real world, if there is one thing which we know for certain it is that all of these central banks have plenty of paper to use to exchange for gold, indeed, virtually infinite amounts. Absent a gold standard; the only thing restraining these governments in the creation of these paper currencies is their own (lack of) discipline.

With "competitive devaluation" still the policy-of-suicide for all these governments; this translates into no discipline at all. It's pedal-to-the-metal with all this paper-printing, meaning that all these governments have mountains of 'money' to devote to their gold-buying. Clearly then, our primary suspicion must be that there is little – if any – gold left for these central banks to vacuum-up.

Before pursuing this thinking further; let me deal with a few permutations of this scenario which may have occurred to astute readers. Obviously the collapse of all these currencies means that the price of gold (denominated in these same currencies) has spiked. Thus one possibility would be that these gold-buyers are simply waiting for more-reasonable prices.

There are two reasons to reject such reasoning. First of all, as previously noted; these governments have essentially infinite amounts of paper to exchange for limited/finite quantities of gold. Playing-out such a scenario; as the price of gold begins to fall, instead of waiting for "the bottom", queue-jumpers would leap into the market to get their gold before supplies are exhausted.

The point of logic here is that with infinite quantities of paper and (in relative terms) extremely limited amounts of gold available; the queue-jumpers would never even begin waiting for "better prices". They would have simply continued their gold-buying at the same robust pace we saw in 2011 and 2012 – knowing that the market will run out of gold long before they run out of paper to use in purchasing gold.

More cynically; with all these governments playing their little game of Competitive Devaluation (where the object of the game is to drive one's currency to zero), there will never be "a good time" for them to buy – i.e. when the price of gold recedes any significant amount below current prices. It makes no sense for any government deliberately driving the value of its own currency to zero to wait for "better prices" for any hard asset.

We also have the reasons put forth by Western banksters:

TDS comments that emerging-market central banks may be less willing to buy gold as they were when U.S. monetary conditions were easing. "Many emerging nations may see their reserves wane, or at the very least grow at a reduced pace. This implies that current holdings of gold represent a higher weight or that less purchasing is required to achieve a target portfolio weighting. Plus there is strong evidence that central banks are pro-cyclical – buying when prices are rallying and selling when they drop.

Of course, coming from the mouth of a banker; this is all either fiction or half-truth. However, for readers to appreciate this, first this double-talk must be translated into English. Boiled-down; the line which the bankers are trying to sell is not that the lemonade-makers have no more lemonade to sell, but rather the lemonade-buyers have a lack of funds.

Typically, we a banker engaging in more upside-down perversion: in their Wonderland Matrix, it's a world where supplies of paper are limited – but there is infinite quantities of "gold" for sale. Of course what these Snake-Oil Salesmen leave out of their analysis is that the infinite quantities of "gold" being sold by these same bankers are, in reality, just mountains of paper masquerading as gold.

Putting aside that first absurdity; this mouthpiece for Western banking is trying to tell us that in a global economy with $100's of trillions floating around global markets (and over $1 quadrillion in the bankers' derivatives casino) that a reduction of $20 billion per month in U.S. money-printing would cause global gold-buying to collapse. Even more absurd; regular readers know that in the real world there has been no "tapering" of the U.S.'s out-of-control money-printing.

The other suggestion from TD Securities is equally silly: that essentially these central banks have a pattern/history of buying high and selling low. This half-truth totally evades the crucial distinction that it's been Western central banks selling gold and Eastern central banks doing the buying.

As sophisticated readers understand; Western banks were dumping gold on the market precisely to cause prices to fall. Meanwhile, Eastern central banks buy gold to protect their economies from (banker-created) "inflation", which is why we naturally see their gold-buying intensify when inflation spikes – and the price of gold is relatively high.

Rejecting the banker propaganda; we return to our original presumption: that there is little gold available for these central banks to buy. We can test this presumption by applying it to what reliable anecdotal evidence is available.

In 2013; at precisely the same time that central banks suddenly/dramatically pulled-back from their gold-buying binge, the following events were taking place. As a consequence of the Cyprus Steal; we had "the flight out of paper", where the Smart Money ditched all of the bankers' paper-called-gold which they were holding, and exchanged it for real gold, instead.

This interpretation is substantiated with unequivocal market data. Holdings of the bankers' paper-called-gold "funds" collapsed by approximately 40%. Comex gold inventories in New York have plummeted by roughly double that amount. Meanwhile, with the paper-called-gold market (at least) one hundred times larger than the real gold market; panic-selling in this much larger (paper) market caused the price of gold to fall.

In turn, this "sale" on (real) gold caused gold imports into the world's two largest gold markets – India and China – to spike to astronomical levels. At one point; by themselves these nations were importing gold at an annual rate of 4,000 tonnes per year.

Clearly the logical presumption that there is little-if-any gold for these central banks to purchase (on the open market) is strongly supported by all available empirical evidence. Here it must be noted that two of the world's largest nations which have publicly acknowledged their large appetite for gold – China and Russia – are also two of the world's largest producers of gold (China is the largest).

What continues to be misreported throughout the media is that nations which purchase gold on the open market must report/declare all such purchases (in a timely manner), while any gold which nations acquire domestically never needs to be reported. This is derived from our international rules on currency transfers. Despite decades of lies by Western bankers that gold had become "a barbarous relic"; these same bankers have never ceased to treat gold as money in all of their own rules and transactions.

Just as is the case with U.S. money-printing, when it comes to accumulations of gold by central banks, we only have some of the data available, and thus we cannot make hard-and-fast conclusions about the overall accumulation of gold by Eastern/Emerging Market central banks. What we can conclude with safety is that there is little gold to be had on the open market – and thus many nations are now (literally) digging it out of the ground for themselves.

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