Wednesday 12 October 2011

Why Buy Copper?

Every few weeks I get an email quoting the spot price of copper and mentioning the 'high price' of the copper bars sold on the Buy Copper website.  
Some people ask for an explanation of the price and some people are rude.  The rude emails are deleted straight away, and I rarely have time now to reply to the people who'd like to know.  
The reason is, tax and labour.  
When you buy copper or silver or titanium, palladium, gallium etc you have to pay tax.  VAT is 20%.  Polishing is labour +VAT, stamping is stamping +VAT 
Paypal takes 3%  and there are other expenses that push the price higher.  

The spot price is a mythical number constantly quoted.  I believe you can buy metals at the spot price from the London Metals Exchange but it would have to be about 20 tonnes! Which you'd have to move with a lorry and the pay 20% VAT. What form it would look like I don't know because nobody does it.  

Remember the price of gold was at an all time low in about 2002?  How many people considered Gold as a good investment back then?  How many uses has gold got?  Not many.  What about Copper?

So as the Euro slides into oblivion much like the Russian Ruble did in the 90s, the currency you think in may actaully be worthless.  
Certainly £75 billion of new Quantatative Easing money from the Bank of England last week hasn't done your savings or weekly wage any good. 

Metals are money, they have value because they are expensive to mine.  Paper money is a promise.  The Bank of England has devalued it's promise of worth.
£75billion pounds is about 10% of GDP in Britain and they'll use that up in under 2 years, which probably means the price of everything in paper Pounds will go up by about 10% before the next round of devaluing.  




Monday 10 October 2011

Copper demand continues to exceed supply - Telegraph

Copper demand continues to exceed supply - Telegraph:

Copper demand continues to exceed supply

Dr Copper's diagnosis for the global economy looks pretty dire. Futures prices for the economically sensitive metal are down by almost a third since their high earlier this year.


'via Blog this'

Sunday 2 October 2011

What is Happening?

Yes, it is a long video, but do you want to know the reasons why?








I spoke to my elderly step dad last week.  He's 75 and we talked about when he was a kid, they had to go into the village to get water from a communal tap.  This was in Cardiff.  The heart of the industrial revolution.  


He also said how copper was like gold back then.  Astonishingly expensive, which probably accounts for people using a communal tap and not affording household plumbing.
  
Oil has made everything cheap.  We may not think something as cheap in price, but compared to a few decades ago, it's all very cheap.   








http://buycopper.co.uk/