Hi Members, As collectors and or investors what is acceptable premium you are willing pay when buying or selling. Im amazed how brick and mortar dealers stay a float? Gold example 1. miner charges spot $2,040 2. refiner adds a fee 3. mint adds fee 4. wholesalers adds a fee 5. dealers adds a fee 6. retail buyer pays $2,078 Below are some of the lower cost items in australian online dealers with shop/offices Silver spot $23.68 listed for $27.68 = 16% -> everyone in the supply chain in total divided up $4 Gold spot $2,040 listed for $2,778 = 1.8% -> everyone in the supply chain in total divided up $38 Of course I am looking at single low end items but bearing in mind in the gold example dealer margin would be a fraction of $38 as all the supoply chain have to make a profit. EDIT: for clarification, Im not looking for cheap dealer premium. Im just curious as to how a dealer stay afloat, with margin of 2% on a main item?
With all in production costs for decent Aust mines being somewhat below spot Gold (and incurred in AUD), I suspect there's a tad more to go around those involved in the process to bring to retail market....but as always it's usually the last person in the chain (retailer) who makes the least $. https://www.australianmining.com.au/news/gold-sector-welcomes-us1300-prices/
check around, then make comparisons of a few prices check your own paying price, so when there is item ready...then execute order 66 it is useless to have low price but sold out it does not make sense to over pay, when there are ready supply of 100 spread for gold is lowest, followed by silver it is more like a scale market, when just a few coins can be advertising items items replacement costs
A lot of businesses survive by cashflow. Cash in > Cash out means you can still survive. From my small talk with a local LCS (the one which I bought my kilo goat from for $730 early this year), it appears that hedging comes with a cost, so it doesn't cover the risk entirely, so a rising gold and silver spot market helps the dealer a lot and may even provide capital gains. Perhaps the dealers amongst us here can share more info?
I was told they do not sell under spot. But they do pay a fee for to refiners for refining from dore to 99.9
One of my mates who used to be a part owner in a large gold buying business once bought a batch of dore for below spot! When he got them refined, they found a steel bolt inside one of the bars.
Even if it is ten percent under spot or call it a fee for refining dore the spread is still very thin isn’t? I actually would have thought the fee to refine 20kg dore to 99.9 to be more than 10%
High volume combined with the spread between the sell rate (above spot) and the buyback rate (below spot) is how dealers 'stay afloat'. Think about it, even with spreads as low as 2% on a 1 ounce gold bar valued at AUD$2000, that equates to $40 profit when a dealer buys the bar and another $40 profit when they sell it, if prices remain stable. Now this is where volume comes in, if you have just 10 customers buying and 10 customers selling said 1 ounce bar a day then your total profit is $800. Not a bad day's work i reckon.
^It doesn't equate to $40 profit each time..you haven't factored in any associated costs to a business such as wages, rent, electricity, insurance, advertising, equipment etc, etc etc.
The margins are thin but the liquidity is very high compared to other commodities and the storage and transport costs are much lower than other commodities as a percentage of the value of the commodity. Say compared to wheat or oil?