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This design is an
adaptation of the old “Buffalo” nickel that was conceived by
James Earl Fraser and produced from 1913 to 1938. And this is
not the first time that Fraser’s classic design has been
recycled by the Mint – in 2001 a commemorative silver dollar was
struck with this same design as a fundraiser for the Smithsonian
Institute.
This new .9999 pure gold bullion Buffalo design will makes its
debut in the form of a 1-ounce .9999 gold bullion coin on
Tuesday, June 20th. Inexplicably, The Mint has embargoed any
actual photos of this coin (which they have been coining for
months now), so we will have to wait until we receive ours in
the last week in June before we actually see what it looks like.
This year, only the 1-ounce gold bullion version will be
produced, to be followed in 2007 by half-, quarter-, and
tenth-ounce versions. Diameters of the various issues will be
exactly the same as the Eagles, but of course each Buffalo will
be slightly thinner as it lacks the extra bulk of alloy present
in the Eagles. The American gold Eagle program will continue to
be struck, as it has since 1986, in all four sizes of .917 fine
gold.
Packaging for the new gold Buffaloes will consist of each coin
sealed in a mylar-like plastic, configured on a ‘sheet’ of 4
rows of 5 coins each. These 20-coin sheets will come from the
Mint in boxes of 500 1-ounce coins per box.
Starting today, we are taking orders for this new coin. For now,
we expect to ship initial orders during first week of July.
Pricing will be the same as our regular 1-ounce gold Eagle
rates. The only question at this time is whether the the Mint
will be overwhelmed with the initial flood of orders and unable
to fill them all this week. If so, orders over 20 coins may be
delayed for Mint supplies to catch up with demand.
Early in July we will have a new web page on the Onlygold site
for the new Buffaloes with picture and pricing.
Yes, we have seen this design in nickel pocket change, and even
in a commemorative silver dollar, but it will still be quite
exciting to see the buffalo shine in gold!
Speaking of buffaloed, that’s quite some frightening downturn
we’ve seen in the metals markets lately, eh? So let’s check out
a few comments seen here and there over the past few days:
“Last month the gold bugs were the talk of Wall Street and today
they couldn't buy a friend with a fist full of Krugerrands”. –
Enrico Orlandini, June 14th
“The mindset right now is that gold is not quite through
consolidating and so many traders burned by the recent moves in
the yellow metal will stand aside and let the blood-letting
finish." - Kevin Kerr, June 12th
“The investment business in general tends to fall into a lull
during the summer months and gold is no exception.” – Michael
Kosares, June 15th
“But down 83.3% over 12 days is still very impressive and it
implies a downside panic -- even capitulation.” … “On the basis
of the above study, I added to my gold position yesterday.” –
Richard Russell, June 16th
“‘… gold's prospects are as bright as ever, and the sharp fall
likely created one of the best buying opportunities of the
current bull market.”- Peter Schiff, June 15th
“…but ultimately the market is more powerful than all the
central banks and the governments put together.” – Congressman
Ron Paul
My own opinion? As most of our clients know, we believe that
only gold will protect you against the often interrupted, but
ultimately inevitable, deterioration of our fiat dollar. We also
believe that gold is now in a very early phase of a secular bull
market.
I cannot count the number of times that I have counseled the
very simple idea that you should own sufficient quantities of
gold as a percentage of your net worth so that you sleep better
at night.
Paul van Eeden actually calls this the Better Sleep Principle.
So now our simple philosophy has a name. On June 16th he wrote:
“I am therefore on the one hand tempted to buy gold stocks since
the price of gold is less than I think it should be. On the
other hand, if the fund managers that have been pouring capital
into metals decide that they want out, the gold price could
still come under considerable pressure.”
”This is where the Better Sleep Principle comes to play. I had
not really thought about it but I have for many years now
subconsciously followed the Better Sleep Principle in my own
investing. It works like this:”
”If I start worrying about something when I go to bed at night I
fix it the next morning. For example, if I own too much of a
stock and am concerned about what would happen if the price
falls, I sell some. If I don't own a particular stock and I lie
in bed worrying that the price would go up before I get a chance
to buy it, I buy some. I do whatever it takes to make me sleep
better at night.”
”Here's why you should follow your own instincts to make sure
you sleep well at night: it doesn't help if you follow someone
else's advice and they sleep well while you lie awake. Investing
is a very personal endeavor; only you know what you need to do.”
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