Buying Silver at 10% Off
by Kevin
Brekke
BIG
GOLD
Inflation
has certainly been all over the headlines lately. As the cost of
basic materials and commodities has pretty much risen across the
board, it was just a matter of time until this rise made its appearance
on store shelves at a retailer near you. With prices at the pump
squeezing motorists as well, the drive to the supermarket is as
painful as watching your groceries being scanned at checkout.
The tide of
rising prices has consumers looking for ways to stretch their purchasing
power coupon clipping and cents back on gasoline via certain
credit cards is one way to fight back.
Metals investors
like us are also alert to any opportunity to add to our precious
metal holdings at the cheapest price. And there is good news for
those of you who listened to our advice and converted some of your
U.S. dollar-denominated wealth into select non-dollar-denominated
assets and foreign currencies. The so-called commodity currencies
have certainly put in a good performance against the dollar.
However, I
want to highlight another currency that has been flying under many
analysts radar: the Swiss franc. The franc has gained more
than 20% against the dollar over the past year and now sits about
11% past parity against the US$. Heres a one-year chart:

An investor
who bought Swiss francs a year ago can today buy an ounce of silver
for 30 francs and change. As shown in the next chart, the nominal
gap in silver pricing now exceeds 10%:

Admittedly,
my 10% off claim assumes that parity between the currencies somehow
represents a fair exchange. Since the exchange rate
between the dollar and the franc floats, it is the free market,
as it should be, that determines the number of units of one currency
needed to buy another.
In the end,
I use parity between the two currencies as a random reference to
illustrate a point: diversifying some of your wealth outside the
dollar is a necessary tactic. Not only will this strategy protect
your purchasing power, but it is a way to leverage the value of
your precious metals holdings.
Holding precious
metal outside the U.S. allows you to not only capture the metals
price advance, but when the value of the metal is converted back
to dollars, an additional gain on the currency conversion will likely
be captured as well. The dollar has crashed 50% against the Swiss
franc since 2001. It could easily repeat this feat over the next
ten years, adding rocket fuel to your precious metals gains.
And theres
an added bonus. When it comes time to sell some of your metal, and
you choose not to repatriate the funds back to the U.S., youll
have the means to take a nice vacation without the budget-busting
effects of converting an ever-decaying dollar into the local currency.
If you dont
own enough gold and silver yet, you still have a chance to load
up on the dips. Read the current BIG
GOLD edition to learn how to take full advantage of a correction
in the precious metals try
BIG GOLD today for only $79 per year, plus 3-month money-back
guarantee.
May
23, 2011
Kevin
Brekke is contributing editor for BIG
GOLD in Casey's Daily Dispatch.
Copyright
© 2011 Casey and Associates
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