If you had purshased a 1 oz Silver MS70 Silver
Eagle every month since the day of issue in 1986, you would have spent around
$24,000.
Do you know how much your 1 oz Silver
Collection would be worth today?
Your 1 oz Silver Collecton would be worth
around $300,000*!
(These figures were calculated from data posted at www.ngccoin.com)
The Most Popular
Numismatic Collector Coin in America Yours For Only $119.00!
Learn how to start your 1 oz Silver Eagle MS70
collection today! >>click here<<
Discounted prices on gold and silver at GovMint.com
>>click here<<
Dr.
William Sheldon a well known numismatist in 1948 standardized the coin grading
system by intoducing his Sheldon Scale. The Sheldon scale runs from a grade of
one to seventy. A grade of seventy is presumed to be an absolute perfect coin
untouched by human hands. Before the Sheldon Scale sellers of collectible coins
were at the mercy of a coin dealer telling them the condition of their coin and
what it was worth. A one point diffeence in grade detemined by a seller could
mean hundreds if not thousands of dollars lost when selling your coins. Now if
a coin is certified, graded and sealed by one of the top grading companies, the
value of the coin can be determined more easily. Before the Sheldon scale and
the introduction of grading companies, it was difficult for collectors to
justify purchasing coins of any significant value. Since Dr. Sheldon introduced
his grading scale back in 1948 the market for numismatic coins has exploded. To
see what other 1 oz silver eagles are selling for on the Internet >>click
here<<
Would you like to learn how to
start accumulating silver 1 oz at a time?
>>click here<<
Would you like to learn how to
start your own silver business?
>>click here<<
"Historically the price of gold has
been around 16 times the price of silver. So, for example, based on the
long-term historical average ratio, with the price of gold around $650, the
price of silver should be around $40. It's not, of course. It's around $12.50.
Today then, the silver ratio is more like 50. What explains the difference
between hundreds of years of history and today? Simple demand for silver
as money. During periods of history when silver has been used as a currency, it
has almost always been valued ~ 1/16th the price of gold. When silver has been
"demonetized," supplies soar as people sell silver for gold and
currency. On the other hand, during periods of monetary crisis, the price of
silver tends to increase far more than the price of gold as demand for silver
is once again created by monetary needs.This influences the silver to gold
ratio heavily in silver's favor. For example, the ratio r eturned to its
historic range (16) during World War I. It happened again in the early 1970s
when Nixon abandoned the gold standard. It also happened most famously in
1979/1980 when gold briefly soared to $800 an ounce and it seemed as if America
was really entering a severe money crisis. Silver is the best hedge against a
money crisis because its price will increase many more times than gold, as the
silver-to-gold ratio reverts to its historic average. Silver will once again be
worth 1/16th the price of gold. It is now worth only about 1/48th. Given this
perspective, I hope you see why silver's recent move from around $7 to around
$12.50 is only the very early signs of a money crisis. " - Porter
Stansberry
"There's around four billion ounces
of gold above ground and around one billion ounces of silver. All that gold is
worth 200 times the silver. Yet 150% of each year's silver mine production is
necessary for vital industrial purposes. Most of the silver ever mined is used
up and gone forever. There's been a silver shortfall every year for 20 years
but the price has failed to reflect this, despite the fact that a shortfall is
one of the most powerful influences in establishing a price." - James Cook
Do you think now could be
the right tome to start accumulating Silver?