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Wednesday, May 20, 2009

Gold Coins or Gold Bullion for Investing

By Cindy Wilson

Not only should your portfolio be diversified with gold, but you should be diversified within the gold portion of your portfolio. There are several different forms of gold you can buy for your portfolio, including gold bullion, foreign or domestic, modern gold coins, foreign or domestic or antique gold coins, foreign or domestic.

There are also options within each gold category that allows you to receive and store your own gold or allow the dealer or broker to keep your gold for you. Most people buying gold are not only buying for diversity, but they are preparing for financial disaster. For those cases, gold coins and antique gold coins have the reputation of not being able to be confiscated by the government because of their intrinsic and collector value.

On the other hand, gold bullion in recent history has been confiscated by the US government and there are several organizations that are trying to push legislation through that will fix that situation by not allowing the government to be able to confiscate personally owned gold bullion or coins of any kind.

Can the US government confiscate foreign gold bullion or modern foreign gold coins? Back when gold was confiscated by President Roosevelt in 1933, foreign gold and foreign gold coins "earmarked or held in trust for a recognized foreign government or foreign central bank"

That would mean that if we go by what happened in history, foreign gold bullion and foreign gold coins would be safe from US gold confiscation. That's what happened before, but the US government can make laws to fit the situation, so the way it happened before, may not be the way it happens in the future.

Older gold coins are pushed by telemarketers and many dealers because of their higher profit margins. Many dealers and sales people prey on buyer's fears about the historical gold confiscation. President Ford issued his own directive that repealed Roosevelt's executive order.

Then Congress in 1977 removed the president's authority to regulate gold transactions during a national emergency other than war. What's that mean? Probably nothing. Sales people that use historic events to sell their most profitable inventory are not being completely honest and preying on investor fears of previous events. This shows that the previous gold confiscation has nothing to do with what the government may do in the future.

Just because President Roosevelt exempted antique gold coins and foreign bullion doesn't mean a current administration would go by those same guidelines. The truth is, no one knows what will happen in the future, especially in the event of a financial collapse. - 23208

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