My favourite way to buy silver

Last Friday, we looked at The best assets to own as Europe breaks up. I said I thought you should hold precious metals and singled out silver. Today Iā€™ll show you a great way to buy it.

Like gold, silver can be a great store of value during tempestuous times ā€“ and I know a lot of Right Siders like the investment.

The problem is, silver can be incredibly volatile. Thatā€™s why I generally advise investors to avoid leveraged positions such as spread-bets for silver. Itā€™s just way too dangerous.

Iā€™d much prefer to hold physical silver, buying it and tucking it away. The problem is that, unlike gold, youā€™ll have to pay VAT if you want to buy physical silver.

But if you know where to look, you can still get a great deal. Today I want to show you how you can buy physical silver at a discount including VAT!

Join the dealers for the best rates

Itā€™s worth trying to pick up cheap silver from dealers in places like Londonā€™s Hatton Garden. There you can buy beautiful solid silver antiques at around the spot price of silver (that is the price silver trades at in the financial markets). But youā€™ll have to pay the VAT on top.

But thereā€™s an even smarter way to do it. Instead of buying from a dealer, you join the dealers. That way youā€™ll be able to buy at less than spot. Now thatā€™s compelling.

Itā€™s all about minimising the market spread (the difference between the buy and sell price). If you can buy below the price quoted in the market, then youā€™re already on to a winner.

Thatā€™s exactly what Iā€™ve been doing. Iā€™ve been stockpiling silver from online auctions and Iā€™ve been regularly buying silver at a discount of up to 10% from the spot price.Ā  And the price I pay either includes VAT, or thereā€™s none chargeable.

 

Why is silver going for less than its true worth?

Of course, whenever you see something that seems too good to be true, you always need to question it. Are you being sold a pup?

Today I want to run through four reasons why this anomaly in silver exists and why you can get a bargain.

First, if you want to sell unwanted silver for scrap, then you wonā€™t get the spot price. Though we may call items ā€˜solid silverā€™, they rarely are. Even silver coins are mostly alloyed. Silver is brittle on its own and itā€™s not easy for silversmiths to work; so itā€™s usually blended with other metals.

Only a refined silver ingot or minted coin is worth spot, and thereā€™s a bit of work involved in getting unwanted silver to this state. Of course, the dealer is going to want his margin on top of that price too. Heā€™s not going to do all this for free! In general youā€™ll get around 15% less than spot for unwanted silver. So if you buy your silver from guys that want to sell ā€˜scrapā€™, then you can buy at a discount.

But this doesnā€™t mean that youā€™re confined to ugly scrap pieces nobody else wants. 90% of what I buy are usable and nice pieces, yet theyā€™re still below the value of silver content…

The second reason you can often get a bargain is because online auction sellers usually donā€™t put in a ā€˜reserveā€™. Take the silver platter pictured below. In terms of silver (at spot price), it was worth Ā£520 when I bought it last week. Itā€™s a 19th century French platter made from very fine silver (Britannia). Youā€™d have thought the seller would have put a reserve in at the value of the silver content wouldnā€™t you?

But they didnā€™t and I picked it up for just over Ā£460. Not only is that around 10% less than the silver value; itā€™s also the final price including VAT (if the seller is VAT registered, itā€™s up to him to pay).

Silver platter

Most sellers donā€™t enter a reserve price and that means there are bargains to be had.

The third reason why there are bargains out there is because buyers have been taken by surprise. Collectors are finding it increasingly difficult to compete with the scrap merchants. A spoon that used to be worth a tenner might now go for Ā£30. Many collectors are shell-shocked and have gone to ground!

But I suspect a new army of collectors will be on their way. And that brings me on to the fourth and final reason why I think now is a good time to get a bargain.

Most financial investors donā€™t tend to mix business with pleasure. In fact most investors hand over investment responsibilities to someone else ā€“ and pay them for their services. But thatā€™s not the way we like to do things here at The Right Side. We like to take control of our financial destiny.

This approach means we can mix business with pleasure. Instead of buying a faceless financial investment, we can buy something that can be both useful and treasured in its own right. Thereā€™s no need for us to bid up the price on investment grade silver (refined ingots) when you can find plenty of interesting items with just a little bit of work.

Iā€™m sure many readers will be interested in taking this further. On Wednesday Iā€™ll be going into more detail on how you can use online auctions. Iā€™ll give you some ā€˜tricks of the tradeā€™ which will be useful as you look to make some shrewd silver purchases.

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Managing Editor: Frank Hemsley. The Right Side is a regulated product issued by Fleet Street Publications Ltd.

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Category: Investing in Gold

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