Popular theory is "Dont go into debt......."
gecko109
Posts: 8,231 ✭
Dont go into debt to buy PM's has been sort of a forum mantra here. However, with ultra low interest rates, skyrocketing PM prices, and a quickly erroding dollar, it almost....ALMOST...makes sense from a financial standpoint. Imagine for example someone who took out a $50k equity loan 6 months ago at 6.5% interest to buy gold. He would have made a $14,000 profit in 6 months time. Will the next 6 months be similar in nature? Is it really a bad idea to buy PM's with borrowed money in this environment?
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borrowing money to invest with would be a guru type move.
all in all, the idea is pretty lousy unless you can afford to lose it and still
repay the loan in my opinion.
what is better is to borrow money to buy a depressed asset such as land
or a home right now due to low interest rates. then actually live in the house
or use the land in a profitable fashion.
gambling and speculating with money that is not yours is exactly how we got
into this mess. see housing crisis for people with big eyes but little wallets.
The US Mint would not be nearly as fun without the ability to speculate a bit......
Miles
<< <i>seems like one could look into the past and pick out examples where
borrowing money to invest with would be a guru type move.
all in all, the idea is pretty lousy unless you can afford to lose it and still
repay the loan in my opinion.
what is better is to borrow money to buy a depressed asset such as land
or a home right now due to low interest rates. then actually live in the house
or use the land in a profitable fashion.
gambling and speculating with money that is not yours is exactly how we got
into this mess. see housing crisis for people with big eyes but little wallets. >>
Absolutely!
Buying gold on credit seems counter intuitive at best.
Stay out of debt and stay away from leverage.
Sleeping well at night is a good thing. Think about that.
MJ
Fellas, leave the tight pants to the ladies. If I can count the coins in your pockets you better use them to call a tailor. Stay thirsty my friends......
Probably not a lot of people on a hard currency forum who would advise that type of leverage.
Credit isn't good or bad. It's its use that is good or bad. If you're disciplined and know what you're doing, it can be done.
--Severian the Lame
My thoughts
the dollar will fall
everyone including the banks, states and fed are deep in debt
the fed will inflate the debts away and inflate the housing market
I will pay back the debts later with lower valued dollars
My equity line was a tax deduction
If it all crashes the debts will be gone and i still have something to barter with
I kept the PMs
I dont know where PMs are headed from here and wouldnt want to buy now with leverage, the market could easily crash 10% but dont be afraid to have debt, the rates will stay low and the dollars will be a lot cheaper later.
Having some personal, live money to put into the market is going to remind everyone where that saying came from"
Cash is king.
www.AlanBestBuys.com
www.VegasBestBuys.com
<< <i>whoa... people buy stocks on margin, why not gold? >>
Have you ever had a margin call? Isn't leverage the biggest reason we are where we are now in the world?
It makes you not sleep at night if you are on the wrong side of the trade.Buying gold/silver on margin is fools play.
There, I said it.
Do not buy on margin or play futures unless you are a professional. MJ
Fellas, leave the tight pants to the ladies. If I can count the coins in your pockets you better use them to call a tailor. Stay thirsty my friends......
If you borrow twice the asset's value to finance an investment in that asset, you double the risk.
If you double the risk, you double the potential reward and you double the potential loss.
It's great if you win.
Does that answer your question?
I knew it would happen.
If you can pay the loan back when you lose your butt speculating, fine, borrow the money against your house to buy metal. Why would you put YOUR HOUSE at risk in such a potential volitile situation. Hindsight is always 20/20. What if metal went the other way? The obvious answer would be "don't ever get into debt and borrow against your house to buy metal." Unless you know know know know know metal is going to go up for however long and you know know know know you can sell it within a week while it's still up, it's a huge gamble. One I did once when I knew better.
fc hit the nail on the head. "gambling and speculating with money that is not yours is exactly how we got
into this mess. see housing crisis for people with big eyes but little wallets."
Too many positive BST transactions with too many members to list.
This debt will not be for gold, rather, it will be for food,
clothing housing and medical. We are entering a period of
survival time by what ever means may be at hand.
Camelot
anyone who has a HELOC at 6.5% shouldn't be playing with 50k now, even though looking back it would have turned out well.
sure i wish i woulda dumped the sink into silver earlier this year, though
<< <i>Dont go into debt to buy PM's has been sort of a forum mantra here. However, with ultra low interest rates, skyrocketing PM prices, and a quickly erroding dollar, it almost....ALMOST...makes sense from a financial standpoint. Imagine for example someone who took out a $50k equity loan 6 months ago at 6.5% interest to buy gold. He would have made a $14,000 profit in 6 months time. Will the next 6 months be similar in nature? Is it really a bad idea to buy PM's with borrowed money in this environment? >>
This sort of thing works until it doesn't and then you have big problems.
There just might come a time when owning GOLD and getting rid of it might become a liability. Remember.....gold has had some pretty slow times, we're just in a unique period where unloading it is extremely easy.
Borrowing money(and being liable for it-and exposing your entire asset base if you can't pay it back) to buy gold(a non yielding 'asset') seems like the ultimate losing proposition. AND.... Exposing your gains on schedule C and just inviting an audit. Geesh.
Bad scenario, ------you lose the gold, you get robbed, you get an audit and take a hit, gold retraces ......but you still owe $$$.....GEESH.
Borrow all the money you can
Flee to Costa Rica
Enjoy life.
Camelot
<< <i>Game plan:
Borrow all the money you can
Flee to Costa Rica
Enjoy life. >>
Throw in some twins and I'll start packing
Fellas, leave the tight pants to the ladies. If I can count the coins in your pockets you better use them to call a tailor. Stay thirsty my friends......
But credit, when used properly is wise and can help generate profits.
Basic example: someone wants to sell you an ounce of gold for $1,000 and you know you can turn around and sell it for $1,050. You borrow the $1,000 and buy the gold, immediately turn around and sell the gold for $1,050. There is a fee involved for the "load" on the original $1,000. You still make a profit.
Now, do that for a thousand ounces or ten thousand ounces.
Using credit to SPECULATE is a different animal of course.
Point is: credit has its time and its place.
Another basic use of credit: buying a house (not to be confused with the abuse of credit that we are working through now).
When I bought a house in 1982 my mortgage was at 13.5% but home prices were going up by 20% or more a year in my area. Using credit, being leveraged, was a dream situation.
Today, of course, you wouldnt want to borrow mortgage money even at 4.75% when the forecast is for home prices to drop another 10% in the next year.
So getting back to gold: those of you confirmed bulls who think gold is going to 2,000 an ounce in the next year or two should be buying all the gold you can at today's market rates of 5% to 8%. You are looking at a 100% gain at a cost of perhaps 8% if you really believe gold is headed for 2K.
www.AlanBestBuys.com
www.VegasBestBuys.com
Alan, there's a big difference between a gold bull and an idiot.
I knew it would happen.
Camelot
Flee to Costa Rica
Enjoy life.
Bear, does Homeland Security take 50% of anything over $10,000 for tax purposes if it's borrowed money? Just askin'.
I knew it would happen.
Then maybe the twins will help assuage your pain.
I knew it would happen.
But credit, when used properly is wise and can help generate profits.
Basic example: someone wants to sell you an ounce of gold for $1,000 and you know you can turn around and sell it for $1,050. You borrow the $1,000 and buy the gold, immediately turn around and sell the gold for $1,050. There is a fee involved for the "load" on the original $1,000. You still make a profit.
Now, do that for a thousand ounces or ten thousand ounces>>
And you give financial advise on the radio?
<<Using credit to SPECULATE is a different animal of course>>
How is that not speculation above in your example ? It's pure speculation. Credit has it's time and place but using it for leverge especially in these times? You will only put 5% of your listeners port in gold but, you subscribe to borrowing to buy gold to others? How do you know you can turn around and sell it immediately for a $50 profit in your example above? Please tell me how that works. What happens if you borrow to buy hundred's of ounces and gold goes DOWN $50? Geez..........stunning
MJ
Fellas, leave the tight pants to the ladies. If I can count the coins in your pockets you better use them to call a tailor. Stay thirsty my friends......
heck if it was a good idea to borrow heavily then, even a better idea now that they are worth even 30% less
or buy twice as much stock with margin
oh wait, why even buy the PM when we can buy futures contracts for less than 5% of full value
and we can watch their value change by the minute
no, lets leverage even more
less buy an option on a futures contract
and do it a few thousnad times - thats the ticket
no worry about storage fees or shipping
just liquidity and buy/sell spreads
this is simply financing a "made trade."
www.AlanBestBuys.com
www.VegasBestBuys.com
<< <i>in my example of buying at 1000 and selling at 1050 there is no speculation because there is already a buyer at 1050. you are simply borrowing the money to buy the gold at 1000 so you can sell it (turn it) at 1050. I guess I wasnt clear in my example.
this is simply financing a "made trade." >>
Apples and oranges to the spirit of the thread. Financing is a different animal. Borrowing to trade or speculate is another. MJ
Fellas, leave the tight pants to the ladies. If I can count the coins in your pockets you better use them to call a tailor. Stay thirsty my friends......
a little seltzer and make a spritzer.
Camelot
You already have a guy that is willing to buy the coin for $50 more than you are going to buy the same coin for. So, either your seller is stupid, or your buyer is. I guess it happens all the time, especially with the larger transactions where borrowing would be necessary.
See?
(The more I think about it, the more I think that it really IS true.)
I knew it would happen.
Box of 20
www.AlanBestBuys.com
www.VegasBestBuys.com
Aw, come on Alan - you described a "made trade" with a spread of $50 and then you said this:
Now, do that for a thousand ounces or ten thousand ounces.
So, you are telling me that $50,000 in profits from "made trades" are sitting there, waiting to be picked if only you can borrow $1,000,000 on demand. That is what you are saying. Or, for your example using ten thousand ounces, you are saying that $500,000 in profits on a loan of $10,000,000 is possible on a "made trade".
Maybe for some people, but not for most. Those kinds of deals require alot of work and alot of connections beforehand. It does happen, but not unless you are wired into an industry and not unless you have expertise.
If it was that easy, everyone would be doing it.
I knew it would happen.
A "made trade" means a contracted trade, and in this case it was a fictitious example.
WHAT THE HECK ARE YOU MAKING A BIG DEAL OVER THIS FOR?????
All I wanted to show was that if you have a deal to buy something and then immediately sell it, it's okay to borrow money to finance the deal.
Now, if we have a semantics problem, then okay, I understand.
Perhaps the phrase "made trade" means something different to you than it does to me.
So let me make this perfectly clear: I never bought gold for 1000 and then sold it to someone else for 1050. BUT if I did have such a "made deal" I would certainly go out and borrow the money to buy the gold and then immediately turn around and sell it. Because that would make good business sense.
Okay??
I hope so.
www.AlanBestBuys.com
www.VegasBestBuys.com
I knew it would happen.