This past week The Fin was selling 50-round boxes of 9mm for $21.99!!! Limit one box per customer. Last summer I bought 1000-rounds for $150... ($7.50 per 50). Craziness.How is lead trending?
I ain’t trading a $5 bill for a $10 green monopoly bill.
My world currency stops in my circle of people. I.E. “my world”But that $5 bill is only worth the "Full Faith and Trust" of the US Government.. If that falls on a worldwide stage the Monopoly money might have more value.
Can you enlighten me on what the mining thing is?I own Bitcoin, Cardano, Dogecoin, and Cardano. That's a far as I've taken it so far,but there another 8 that I could buy on one of my trading apps. The federally regulated side of the convo is ridiculous because it flies in the face of why crypto came to be.
I'm working on a deal with a Bitcoin mining outfit and they'd be able to pay us in Bitcoin and/or Ethereum if we could accept it.
The group I'm working with consider themselves a "Digital Infrastructure" firm. Their business model is gaining access to mega-capacities of electricity where they then build a server farm. The servers are capable of running complex algorithms that can produce crypto outputs, blockchain results, or other "data center" type outputs. With Bitcoin, the computers "mine" the output by computing these algorithms which results in an output that's eventually "validated" and they get compensated for that validated output. They can also verify transactions using the same computers. This group partners with a Bitcoin trader who takes all their validated output and turns it into actual currency for them. If they wanted to shift gears and do blockchain encryption, they could do the same thing on those computers.Can you enlighten me on what the mining thing is?
Everyone I know with no money problems owns one thing for sure……land. They can’t make more like other things and it never goes down. Being who we are in this group I’d have to agree w buying land w cash flows, look for cash crop or some type of government program that pays you not to plant. Can always hunt and do the things you love to do in the great outdoors.There are problems with investment in things like precious metals and gems, coins, guns, art etc and that is storing them securely. Theft, fire, flood are real concerns and the cost of safes, security systems, insurance etc can eat returns. Also with things like guns you can’t ignore the risk of government regulations harming future values. If you do decide to invest in such things the best advise I’ve heard is buy what you like not just what you think is a good investment.
Real estate is a whole different animal, I’d look at real estate that cash flows. That covers your taxes and insurance. Rental property, farmland, timberland etc. Look just past where the current activity is and for property on busier roads that might become commercial corridors. Of course real estate is less liquid. But an auctioneer can turn it into cash in a couple months.
This guy uses an abandoned paper mill hydroelectric plant for the energy to mine bitcoins.Here's a look at a site in Georgia. Let's say there's a 95% chance Ohio announces a similar project in the next 6-8 weeks
From what I have seen with land it goes up in markets like now, and never really comes completely back down. Over time the usual increase is 2-3% a year on land. It’s not a lot but it’s an increaseOne thing that I've been doing a lot of thinking about here recently is investment in inflation-proof non-market impacted liquidable assets. There are the typical commodities such as physical silver and gold that hedge inflation and do best in down markets. But I've also considered older Firearms as they seem to do very well when held on to for a couple decades. I would categorize these as any firearm that was made prior to the inclusion of plastic or polymer as materials. I know some here have hedged the inflation monster using firearms as an investment. , I've also considered undeveloped land but that seems to be hit-or-miss when the market makes downturn the liquidity due to purchasing restrictions and valuation of that land suffers.