Why Buy
Gold? - Canadian Gold Silver
“We have gold because we cannot
trust Governments.”
President Herbert Hoover
The
symbol of kings and the treasure of nations, desired by all but possessed by
few, gold has been cherished for all of recorded history. In the 5th century
B.C., Aristotle pondered the question of the perfect medium for money. He
concluded that gold is perfect money for 5 reasons:
·
Durability
Gold won’t rot, break, crumble,
decay, corrode or tarnish. Gold is unaffected by air, water, and even most
acids.
·
Convenience and portability
A lifetime of wealth will fit in
your pocket.
·
Divisibility
Gold can easily be divided into
smaller amounts. An ounce of gold can be split 100 or even 1000 times.
·
Consistency
One ounce of pure gold is exactly
the same as any other ounce, enabling worldwide trade and liquidity of gold –
unlike unique items of jewelry or artwork.
·
Demand
Gold has a staggering variety of
uses, even more today than in Aristotle’s time. Its unique properties keep the
demand high and the relative scarcity of the metal insures continued value.
·
Demand
Gold has a staggering variety of
uses, even more today than in Aristotle’s time. Its unique properties keep the
demand high and the relative scarcity of the metal insures continued value.
Gold is still perfect money,
perhaps more perfect money than money. Gold remains the time-honored standard
of wealth that no other currency can match.
·
Gold Historical Background
Gold has a long and complex
history. From gold’s first discovery, it has symbolized wealth and guaranteed
power. Gold has caused obsession in men and nations, destroyed some cultures
and gave power to others.
The oldest pieces of gold jewelry
Egyptian jewelry were found in the tomb of Queen Zer and that of Queen Pu-abi
of Ur in Sumeria and are the oldest examples found of any kind of jewelry in a
find from the third millennium BC.
Over the
centuries, most of the Egyptian tombs were raided, but the tomb of Tutankhamen
was discovered undisturbed by modern archaeologists. Inside the largest
collection of gold and jewelry in the world was found and included a gold coffin
whose quality showed the advanced state of Egyptian craftsmanship and
goldworking (second millennium BC).
The
Persian Empire, in what is now Iran, made frequent use of Gold in artwork as
part of the religion of Zoroastrianism. Persian goldwork is most famous for its
animal art, which was modified after the Arabs conquered the area in the 7th
century AD.
When Rome
began to flourish, the city attracted talented Gold artisans who created gold
jewelry of wide variety. The use of gold in Rome later expanded into household
items and furniture in the homes of the higher classes. By the third century
AD, the citizens of Rome wore necklaces that contained coins with the image of
the emperor. As Christianity spread through the European continent, Europeans
ceased burying their dead with their jewelry. As a result, few gold items
survive from the Middle Ages, except those of royalty and from church hoards.
In the
Americas, the skill of Pre-Columbian cultures in the use of Gold was highly
advanced long before the arrival of the Spanish. Indian goldsmiths had mastered
most of the techniques known by their European contemporaries when the Spanish
arrived. They were adept at filigree, granulation, pressing and hammering,
inlay and lost-wax methods. The Spanish conquerors melted down most of the gold
that they took from the peoples of this region and most of the remaining
examples have come from modern excavations of grave sites. The greatest
deposits of gold from these times were in the Andes and in Columbia.
During
the frontier days of the United States news of the discovery of gold in a
region could result in thousands of new settlers, many risking their lives to
find gold. Gold rushes occurred in many of the Western States, the most famous
occurring in California at Sutter’s Mill in 1848. Elsewhere, gold rushes
happened in Australia in 1851, South Africa in 1884 and in Canada in 1897.
The rise
of a gold standard was meant to stabilize the global economy, dictating that a
nation must limit its issued currency to the amount of gold it held in reserve.
Great Britain was the first to adopt the gold standard in 1821, followed, in
the 1870s, by the rest of Europe followed. The system remained in effect until
the end of the first world war, after which the US was the only country still
honoring the Gold Standard. After the war, other countries were allowed to keep
reserves of major currencies instead of gold. The arrival of the great
depression marked the end of the U.S. export of gold in the 1930s. By mid 20th
century, the US dollar had replaced gold in international trade.
The
American Eagle Bullion program was launched in 1986 with the sale of gold and
silver bullion coins. Platinum was added to the American Eagle Bullion family
in 1997. A bullion coin is a coin that is valued by its weight in a specific
precious metal.
Gold Uses
Gold is
an ancient metal of wealth, commerce and beauty, but it also has a number of
unique properties that make it invaluable to industy. These properties include:
·
Resistance
to corrosion
·
Electrical
conductivity
·
Ductility
and malleability
·
Infrared (heat)
reflectivity
·
Thermal
conductivity
Gold’s superior electrical conductivity,
malleability, and resistance to corrosion have made it vital in components used
in a wide range of electronic products and equipment, including computers,
telephones, cellular phones, and home appliances.
Gold has
extraordinarily high reflective powers that are relied upon in the shielding
that protects spacecrafts and satellites from solar radiation and in industrial
and medical lasers that use gold-coated reflectors to focus light energy. And
because gold is biologically inactive, it has become a vital tool for medical
research and is even used in the direct treatment of arthritis and other
intractable diseases.
The
demand for gold in industry is steady and growing. The supply of gold from
stored inventory and from mining operations is limited and will remain so.
Demand from investors who want to posses this precious metal is steady, and
increases during periods of world crises or instability. The result is a market
with much more upside potential than down.
Gold is
an excellent hedge against inflation, and protects earnings for the future.
Modern investors can invest in gold the traditional way — by purchasing gold
bullion in the form of bars or coins — or they can trade in gold or gold
futures electronically, or by investing in gold mining or refining companies.
I
strongly advise you to take possession of real gold and silver, at anywhere
near today’s prices, while you still can. The fundamentals indicate rising
prices for decades to come, and a major price spike can happen at any time.
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