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The post is not about whether or not gold is a sensible investment. The post is about whether or not buying gold from Goldline & Beck is a sound investment. If Apple Computer is quoted on the NASDAQ at $250 a share, and you have to pay a legitimate broker $100 to obtain ten shares, then your net cost is $2600 for ten shares. So, if Glenn Beck says buy through HIS broker, who will charge you $1500 instead of $100, does that mean Apple is a bad investment? No, all it means is that Glenn Beck is touting a crooked broker.
So it is with Goldline. They are charging something like an 80% premium on the French 20 franc gold coins with the rooster on them. Any legitimate dealer will charge a maximum of 15% for these coins, and they are very plentiful--extremely so. Goldline might not tell you this, but over 70% of the 20 franc rooster coins are official restrikes, made by the French government in the 1950s to replace gold coins they melted down for ingots during the First World War to pay for their war effort. Most of the coins Goldline (or any other dealer) will offer you were not struck in the years on the coins, and are therefore not as old as their dates indicate. Only an expert coin specialist can tell the difference between an original and a restrike. But that's a minor detail.
The major detail is that Goldline is selling their victims coins at prices far above what any legitimate gold coin dealer would charge for the same coins. This is NOT a good investment. It is a very bad investment. You may think gold is a solid investment at $1160 an ounce. You may even be right, I don't know. But when gold is $1160 an ounce, you might expect to pay $1200 or even $1250 (pro rata) an ounce for gold in coin form. Paying $1900 an ounce, however, when the gold price is $1160, is a very bad investment unless you are looking for numismatic value, which is a whole other ball game, but THIS is what the post is about, not gold per se. Heritage in Dallas would charge about $250 or less at today's $1160 gold for a gold French 20 Franc rooster coin. Goldline would charge around $375 for the same coin, some of which will go into Beck's pocket for recommending you to buy from Goldline. Heritage is a wholesaler of this stuff, and they don't handle this particular kind of coin except for specific orders from other dealers, or very large retail orders, so don't go calling them. I just used them as an example, as I know them, and asked their gold department what they would charge.
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