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Help Needed From Gold Experts


Jay76

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HOLA441

Hi Folks,

I'm converting my relatively small ISA from rapidly depreciating BOE notes into real money. Can anyone with experience of buying gold tell me if Bullionvault is a reputable company. I would hold physical gold, except the premium to be paid is a little too high IMHO.

I'm sick of saving my hard earned money and getting less in an ISA than real world inflation of 8 - 12% IMO.

Cheers

Jamie

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HOLA442

The last I heard no one from this board had actually gone to the vault that Bullion Vault uses and asked to be given their physical allocated gold so they could take it away. Other than that I apparently own a small amount but I have not as yet ever sold any and so don't really, really know for sure. In theory, as it is an allocated account, if Bullion Vault goes bust then the companies creditors do not have a right to your gold. You may need to go and arrange a new place to store it but it should, in theory, remain yours. The actual vault itself is not operated by Bullion Vault either and so I guess Via Mat, who do operate/own(?) the vault would not let any creditors in. Check out the Bullion Vault info page for more info:

http://www.bullionvault.com/help/?FAQs/FAQs_vaulting.html

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HOLA443
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HOLA445
Do you think old Sovereigns and Britannias will be better than mint condition Krugerrands or Maples?

Doubt it. Britannias seem to go at quite a premium. It almost as if their value is made up of two components: 1) the gold content 2) the 'collectability' or whatever you want to call it.

I can't see the 2nd component of their value holding up in a recession. I'm sticking with Maples.

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They are exempt from UK capital gain tax because they are UK legal tender. Other non-uk coins are not UK legal tender hence are subject to UK capital gain tax.

http://www.hmrc.gov.uk/manuals/cg4manual/CG78307.htm

http://www.hmrc.gov.uk/manuals/cg4manual/CG78308.htm

Good point. That capital gains tax would be quite a hefty amount after hyperinflation kicks in.

Thanks for the heads up. :)

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HOLA448
Ideally, you want to obtain the gold without the gov't knowing anyway. Point taken though.

Again good point. i'm not planning on declaring what gold I buy and sell.

However, the government are going to want to know when the price is $5000 per ounce exactly who is trading. :ph34r:

***edit*** aren't the government already wanting people to declare amount over a certain value anyway? wasn't there also a story about jewellers and coin dealers being made to report transactions?

hmmm

Edited by narco
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Again good point. i'm not planning on declaring what gold I buy and sell.

However, the government are going to want to know when the price is $5000 per ounce exactly who is trading. :ph34r:

When it gets that bad, I'm afraid we may find that laws pertaining to gold will change somewhat! so basing your investment stratagies around todays laws could hit you with a nasty surprise.

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Are these coins pure gold?

I'm sure I saw something labelled as sovereign in a gold shop today but listed as 9 carats?

Can someone elaborate please?

Not sure about sovereigns but Krugerrands and Maples both contain exactly 1 ounce of 24 carat gold. However, the Krugerrands have an additional % of copper to provide durability, meaning the entire coin is actually classed as 22 carat.

The Maples are smaller but completely pure. (from what i understand.)

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HOLA4412
Not sure about sovereigns but Krugerrands and Maples both contain exactly 1 ounce of 24 carat gold. However, the Krugerrands have an additional % of copper to provide durability, meaning the entire coin is actually classed as 22 carat.

The Maples are smaller but completely pure. (from what i understand.)

I thought Krugerands were 100% gold?

EDIT Forget it- I thought 24 carat was a fraction of gold- its not- sorry chaps

Edited by Bloo Loo
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HOLA4413
Not sure about sovereigns but Krugerrands and Maples both contain exactly 1 ounce of 24 carat gold. However, the Krugerrands have an additional % of copper to provide durability, meaning the entire coin is actually classed as 22 carat.

The Maples are smaller but completely pure. (from what i understand.)

Where are the best place to purchase these coins from?

Are there any cheap reputable dealerships around?

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HOLA4415
Not sure about sovereigns but Krugerrands and Maples both contain exactly 1 ounce of 24 carat gold. However, the Krugerrands have an additional % of copper to provide durability, meaning the entire coin is actually classed as 22 carat.

The Maples are smaller but completely pure. (from what i understand.)

Full sovereigns are the same as krugerrands but require 4 to make a troy ounce.

Edited by Daft Boy
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Are there any price advantages to buying say Krugers over Soveriegn giving that South Africa has gold mines and the UK very little in comparison?

No. Gold is around £400 an ounce at the moment. You can buy a full sovereign anywhere for about £90 at the moment which means you can get an ounce of gold for around £360. A Krugerrand sells around £395. Will gold go up or down in value ? nobody knows. I think it will but what do I know.

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I've just did a bit of digging myself and taxfreegold.co.uk suggests that all bullion coins are tax free. i.e. Kruggers etc are tax free too? They also sting you 7.5 percent above the price of gold if buying small quantities. Ouch. Wonder how much they buy them back for? Anyone got any recommendations of where to

So if I go buy a bar of gold and sell it for 1000 pounds more after april of next year, I'll pay £180 tax? Any other ways to avoid tax?

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HOLA4421
I've just did a bit of digging myself and taxfreegold.co.uk suggests that all bullion coins are tax free. i.e. Kruggers etc are tax free too? They also sting you 7.5 percent above the price of gold if buying small quantities. Ouch. Wonder how much they buy them back for? Anyone got any recommendations of where to

So if I go buy a bar of gold and sell it for 1000 pounds more after april of next year, I'll pay £180 tax? Any other ways to avoid tax?

Gold and silver coins are becoming harder to get hold of.

APMEX has silver (large quantaties 500+ oz) delivery at January 8th (was stock), and price of Kruggers at $30 over spot (was 10).

Edited by Pluto
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I've just did a bit of digging myself and taxfreegold.co.uk suggests that all bullion coins are tax free. i.e. Kruggers etc are tax free too?

They're talking about VAT here. Due to EU law, all investment gold is VAT free on purchase, coin/bar whatever.

The CGT exemption appears to be UK specific legislation applying to sterling coins only.

So if I go buy a bar of gold and sell it for 1000 pounds more after april of next year, I'll pay £180 tax? Any other ways to avoid tax?

No, you'll only be liable for CGT if you exceed your CGT allowance of approx £9k capital gain in a year on non sterling coins.

Edited by Ursus Helvetica
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Reputable dealers I've used are Chards (taxfreegold), ATS Bullion and Bairds (goldline.co.uk). If you haven't bought gold before go through dealers until you are confident after DYOR.

Assuming I wanted to buy a few sovs it seems the age and design add a premium.

Reading this it seems to be sensible to buy the newer less sought after ones:

http://www.taxfreegold.co.uk/wesellsovereigns.html

Is there more to it or is the extra price simply a collectors tax?

Cheers

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