If I Were a Rich Man
by Richard Russell
321
Gold
Recently
by Richard Russell: Something
To Think About
It's difficult
to make people believe that there's a difference between an investment
for a possible profit and a store of wealth. But rich people know
the difference. When a man has made as much money as he can, he
starts worrying about losing that money. That's the time when he
wants to own "eternal stores of wealth." Yesterday "The
Scream", a painting by Munch, sold at auction for a record
$119 million. I doubt if the buyer cares whether that painting will
be worth $100 million, $50 million or $200 million ten years from
now. The buyer knows that he owns a priceless work of art, something
that will double in value in case of wild inflation or something
that will be worth $60 million during the worst deflation.
Even if the
dollar becomes worthless as a unit of exchange, the Munch painting
will still be worth a fortune in what ever unit of money is in favor
ten or fifty years from now.
All of which
tells us something about gold. For over five thousand years, gold
has represented purchasing power. No matter what form of money was
in existence at the time, gold possessed purchasing power. Which
is why many wise men own gold.
If I asked
you to leave something for your great grandkids in a package to
be opened one hundred years from now, would you leave them a wad
of hundred dollar bills or one hundred gold coins? If you had any
brains you would pick the gold coins. I'd venture that Warren Buffet
would also pick the coins. Why? Because we know that one hundred
years from now the gold coins would represent value and purchasing
power and the dollar might not exist. End of story.
Read
the rest of the article
May
8, 2012
Copyright
© 2012 321 Gold
|