OPM 10oz bars .89 above spot per ounce + free shipping
tincup
Posts: 5,142 ✭✭✭✭✭
Silver must be going to dive some more.... From my email inbox I see Provident is selling Ohio Precious Metals 10 ounce silver bars at .89 per ounce above spot PLUS free shipping with code... very tempting. (looks like you only have to include one OPM 10 ounce and then your entire order is free shipping with code OPMSHIPFREE )
----- kj
0
Comments
<< <i>x3 >>
Yeah, look before you leap!
Hard to beat those prices after free shipping
BST Transactions (as the seller): Collectall, GRANDAM, epcjimi1, wondercoin, jmski52, wheathoarder, jay1187, jdsueu, grote15, airplanenut, bigole
<< <i>Decided to purchase 10 bars today, $2,259 with free shipping. >>
I think thats a decent buy.
Knowledge is the enemy of fear
<< <i>Silver went down and their price went up "Ohio Precious Metals, OPM 10 oz Silver Bars are available for $1.19 over spot per ounce in any quantity!" >>
It's the weekend and the markets are closed so you increase your spreads.
Got quoins?
<< <i>Silver went down and their price went up "Ohio Precious Metals, OPM 10 oz Silver Bars are available for $1.19 over spot per ounce in any quantity!" >>
The offer ended Friday at 5pm CST.
<< <i>Silver went down and their price went up "Ohio Precious Metals, OPM 10 oz Silver Bars are available for $1.19 over spot per ounce in any quantity!" >>
Had you read this thread, you would have been one of the "early birds to catch the worm"
scroll down to about the middle...
Silver deals
<< <i>Friday was the day to buy.... too bad I was not able to get back from my regular job in time to meet the deadline..... >>
I got back in time but made dinner and forgot until too late - missed by 20 minutes. Besides, I really want serial-numbered bars anyway...
(Just think of city streets clogged with a hundred thousand horses each generating 15 lbs of manure every day...)
<< <i>
<< <i>Decided to purchase 10 bars today, $2,259 with free shipping. >>
I think thats a decent buy. >>
Time will tell (of course I am optomistic), I am ready to purchase some more if it falls below $20 even tough I think I own enough.
<< <i>
<< <i>Silver went down and their price went up "Ohio Precious Metals, OPM 10 oz Silver Bars are available for $1.19 over spot per ounce in any quantity!" >>
Had you read this thread, you would have been one of the "early birds to catch the worm"
scroll down to about the middle...
Silver deals >>
I was stating a fact; please don't misconstrue that as some type of missed opportunity on my part (I'm only buying SAEs and 90% at this point).
<< <i>
<< <i>Friday was the day to buy.... too bad I was not able to get back from my regular job in time to meet the deadline..... >>
I got back in time but made dinner and forgot until too late - missed by 20 minutes. Besides, I really want serial-numbered bars anyway... >>
I notice that most silver bars don't show serial numbers anymore. I'm not sure what value they have considering ASE's don't have serial numbers and they don't have any trouble selling all they make.
Worry is the interest you pay on a debt you may not owe.
"Paper money eventually returns to its intrinsic value---zero."----Voltaire
"Everything you say should be true, but not everything true should be said."----Voltaire
<< <i>I notice that most silver bars don't show serial numbers anymore. I'm not sure what value they have considering ASE's don't have serial numbers and they don't have any trouble selling all they make. >>
Serial numbers are handy for tax and accounting reasons. Especially if a bar becomes a "collectible" like so many of the Engelhards have. Then you stop considering it as a commodity interchangeable with your other bars and consider it as a unique item.
Think of what happens if a buy a bar today then the same type of bar a year later but ten years later it becomes a collectible and I sell one of them. How do I account for my basis in a tax return or (shudder) audit?
Hence, if I buy an un-numbered bar of a particular type I can only do that once. Whereas if it has a serial number I can buy without regrets; I always know I can buy more and as long as I'm recording the serial numbers of my purchases I won't have problems.
That's why, for example, I have my eye on the Scottsdale Silver stackable bars but not those marketed by APMEX. I think both bars are manufactured by Materion Corp yet Scottsdale's bars are numbered while APMEX's are not.
(Just think of city streets clogged with a hundred thousand horses each generating 15 lbs of manure every day...)
<< <i>
<< <i>I notice that most silver bars don't show serial numbers anymore. I'm not sure what value they have considering ASE's don't have serial numbers and they don't have any trouble selling all they make. >>
Serial numbers are handy for tax and accounting reasons. Especially if a bar becomes a "collectible" like so many of the Engelhards have. Then you stop considering it as a commodity interchangeable with your other bars and consider it as a unique item.
Think of what happens if a buy a bar today then the same type of bar a year later but ten years later it becomes a collectible and I sell one of them. How do I account for my basis in a tax return or (shudder) audit?
Hence, if I buy an un-numbered bar of a particular type I can only do that once. Whereas if it has a serial number I can buy without regrets; I always know I can buy more and as long as I'm recording the serial numbers of my purchases I won't have problems.
That's why, for example, I have my eye on the Scottsdale Silver stackable bars but not those marketed by APMEX. I think both bars are manufactured by Materion Corp yet Scottsdale's bars are numbered while APMEX's are not. >>
Scottsdale stacker bars, except for the ones issued this year, have never had a number and they were produced by Academy. It's very unlikely that the newer ones will ever carry much of a premium. It's quite obvious that APMEX has the older bars and not the ones issued in 2013.