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A Tale of Helicopter Money and Hard Assets

A Tale of Helicopter Money and Hard Assets

Helicopter money is a term popularized by the former Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke in his 2002 speech, “Making Sure ‘It’ Doesn’t Happen Here“.  This speech outlined policies that the Fed could pursue to ensure that deflation didn’t take root in the U.S., thus (hopefully) avoiding the same financial misery that plagued Japan since its twin stock market/property market bubble burst in the early 1990s.

I will quote a relevant excerpt from the talk that Bernanke delivered to the National Economists Club in Washington, D.C.:

“…U.S. dollars have value only to the extent that they are strictly limited in supply. But the U.S. government has a technology, called a printing press (or, today, its electronic equivalent), that allows it to produce as many U.S. dollars as it wishes at essentially no cost. …If we do fall into deflation…we can take comfort that the logic of the printing press example must assert itself, and sufficient injections of money will ultimately always reverse a deflation.”

It is important to point out how radical this financial theory really was at the time.  Over the course of the 20th century, central banks have learned the hard lesson that monetizing government debt – buying significant quantities of government bonds either directly from the national treasury or from the secondary market – inevitably leads to the eventual destruction of the currency.  In other words, monetizing government debt (aka helicopter money) is nothing more than ugly inflationism that gradually impoverishes a nation.

Although Bernanke’s speech never explicitly mentioned the term “helicopter money”, the concept has nonetheless become intimately associated with his extremist approach to dealing with potentially deflationary economic situations.

The Federal Reserve got a chance to try out Bernanke’s flawed monetary policies after the U.S. housing bubble popped in 2008.  This bursting bubble ushered in the country’s most severe economic crisis since the Great Depression.  Unfortunately, Bernanke’s helicopters only dropped money over Wall Street, while Main Street USA was curiously left off the list of money drop destinations.

This was a feature, not a bug.

The Federal Reserve pushed short term interest rates to almost zero for a full 8 years, depriving savers, retirees and the prudent of desperately needed interest income while simultaneously enriching the big banks via inflated net interest margins.  The Fed didn’t stop there though.  They also engaged in Quantitative Easing, or “QE” for short, where they printed trillions of dollars out of thin air and purchased Treasury and mortgage securities from cash-strapped banks.  And then the Fed doubled down by giving trillions more dollars of effectively interest-free loans to banks, insurance companies and other vaguely financial institutions – like the motorcycle maker Harley Davidson!

A Graph of the Federal Funds Rate from 2007 to 2018

A Graph of the Federal Funds Rate from 2007 to 2018

Even the U.S. Government had a helicopter money drop of its own when Congress passed the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP), which authorized the Treasury to inject up to $700 billion of taxpayer money into banks to make sure they didn’t receive their just desserts (which were bankruptcy, followed by liquidation).

I do have a point with this financial history lesson, so please stay with me.

You see, the excessive debt loads that caused the global economy to grind to a halt in 2008 were never resolved.  Instead, the central bankers of the world, in their questionable wisdom, decided to fix a debt problem by loading the world up with even more debt.  This is like trying to cure a hangover with a bottle of 80-proof whiskey.  It might seem to work wonderfully at first, but eventually you are going to die of alcohol poisoning.

Well, here we are 10 years later slumped over in the financial gutter.  Another recession is coming soon and I fear we are ill prepared for it.  This looming mega-recession will be massively deflationary, spawning a liquidity crisis/dollar shortage of gargantuan proportions.  The Fed will react with sheer panic; none of their highly mathematical (but quite useless) models will have predicted the end of the financial world as we know it.

Initially, the Fed will pursue the same flawed policies it did in the previous crisis.  They will lower interest rates back down to zero (or possibly even below zero), purchase Treasury and mortgage debt via QE, and hand out interest-free loans like candy (but only to their big bank friends).  They will even hand out fistfuls of dollars to foreign central banks via swap lines to help ensure that foreign banks don’t run out money.

However, these radical steps, which were barely enough to stabilize our crumbling financial system last time, will be utterly insufficient this time around.  The debt-laden economy will continue to spiral downward, even with all these bailouts in place.  In addition, the public is wise to the corrupt bankers’ game this time.  The common man will undoubtedly demand a helicopter money bailout of his own.

I’m sure the Federal Reserve Board Members and Washington, D.C. politicians will resist this public groundswell at first.  However, I’m equally certain that average citizens will be adamant that they should enjoy a turn at the money spigot this time.  If the career politicians and bureaucrats refuse, then I believe we will be looking at another French Revolution: chaotic, bloody and violent.

I think the Powers That Be, fearing for their own safety, will ultimately relent and the helicopters will take flight over Main Street.

Helicopter money for the average citizen could assume several different forms.  It could come via something as simple as a lump-sum, one-time check for each adult citizen.  Or it could arrive as a rebate of FICA taxes paid over the last 5 or 10 years.

Universal Basic Income, or UBI, is another interesting possibility.  This would be a small monthly income stream for life, very similar to Social Security.  The only difference is that UBI would be paid to all adult citizens instead of just the elderly.

The final possibility for widespread helicopter money is a proposal by the iconoclast Australian economist Steve Keen.  He believes that government should engage in a modern-day debt jubilee of sorts.  This would involve the government mailing out big checks to everyone, but with a twist: your debts would be paid off first.

So if you had a mortgage for $100,000 and the bailout amount was $50,000, the government would send the $50k to your bank to pay down your mortgage.  In other words, your mortgage would be cut in half.  Even the payments would be halved, as it is probable that installment debt would be re-amortized after such an event.  The only people who would receive helicopter money directly under Keen’s proposal would be those who had either no, or modest debts.

The primary benefit of the Keen proposal is that it would save our necrotic banking system – something that would appeal tremendously to our corrupt political overlords.  This factor alone greatly boosts its chances of implementation.

Regardless of how it is deployed, all of this money printing is going to have a fundamentally different impact on the economy than the prior round did in 2008.  Back then, the money was only dropped on Wall Street and it stayed there.  This resulted in massive asset price inflation, but little consumer price inflation.

This time around, it is clear that any helicopter money that lands on Main Street will affect prices in the real economy.  And this is the crux of my thesis.

From 2008 until 2019 we have been living through a stealth depression for the average person.  Wages have been stagnant.  Interest income has been nil.  Good jobs and promotions have been hard to come by.  Instead, all the perks from money printing went straight into the pockets of the large banks and other monopolistic corporations.

This had the effect of depressing the price of hard assets like antiques, gemstones, art and bullion.  These asset classes were completely ignored by traditional asset managers who were too busy chasing stock and bond market bubbles to care.

The only exceptions to this rule were the very finest, most internationally-renowned gemstones and artworks, which sold for millions of dollars to the ultra-wealthy as trophies.  Any hard asset selling for less than $30,000 or $40,000 wasn’t even considered fit to be an impulse purchase for the obscenely rich.  And anything priced below $10,000 was simply irredeemably low-brow.

All of this will change when helicopter money is dropped onto Middle America during the next recession.  Average people will rightly start looking for a way to protect their wealth.  And neither stocks, nor bonds, nor cash will do the job this time.  High-end antiques, precious gems, fine art and bullion will be the obvious safe havens in this scenario.

I don’t care whether you choose to sink your money into a relatively conservative hard asset, like pre-1933 semi-numismatic U.S. gold coins, or opt for something more unconventional, like vintage Must de Cartier wristwatches.  But you absolutely must allocate a bare minimum of 5% to 10% (and preferably more) of your investment portfolio to tangible assets if you hope to preserve your purchasing power against the tidal wave of printed money that is coming.

It has been my longstanding prediction that the Federal Reserve’s balance sheet will balloon from its prior peak of $4.5 trillion to an astounding $20 trillion in the next recession.  And unlike our last financial crisis, much of this freshly printed helicopter money will find its way into the hands of the middle class.  This will naturally drive up both demand and prices for quality tangible assets.  But it is vitally important that you act now before the freshly-printed money hits the economy.  This will allow you to get into these intriguing unconventional assets for obscenely low prices before the crowd discovers them.

 

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My 8 Requirements for the Perfect Crypto-Currency

My 8 Requirements for the Perfect Crypto-Currency

Although I don’t own any, I find crypto-currencies to be a really interesting concept.  The world desperately needs an alternative to the shortcomings of venal central bankers and their unstable fiat currencies.

Then a thought crossed my mind.  What would my personal requirements for the perfect crypto-currency be?  What would make a crypto-currency good enough to challenge and possibly displace traditional government-issued money?

According to the Antique Sage, the perfect crypto-currency must be:

 

1) SECURE

There must be every assurance that the blockchain cannot be corrupted or manipulated in order to steal, divert, destroy, double spend or counterfeit the crypto-currency.  This basic requirement for a successful digital currency has largely been solved, albeit not without a few growing pains along the way.

All the large cryptos, including Bitcoin (BTC), Ethereum (ETC) and Ripple (XRP), along with most of the smaller ones, are quite secure today.

 

2) NON-INFLATIONARY

The terminal growth rate of the crypto money supply must be under 1% per annum.  This is to avoid the situation that exists with fiat currencies today, where central banks are free to issue currency in unlimited quantities to their banking buddies and the politically-connected (as happened during the 2008 financial crisis).

This is another problem that the crypto-community has largely solved.  Bitcoin, for example, will famously cap-out with a total of 21 million tokens.  After 21 million Bitcoin have been mined (most likely sometime in the 22nd century), the terminal growth rate of the currency will drop to zero.  No more Bitcoin will ever be created after this point.

Most other crypto-currencies have followed their progenitor’s lead.  For instance, Litecoin (LTC) will top-out at 84 million coins, while Cardano (ADA) has a maximum potential supply of 45 billion.  However, a few have chosen to allow infinite (but controlled) monetary expansion, like Monero (XMR) and Ethereum.  I believe this option is completely acceptable, provided the terminal inflation rate remains below 1%.

 

3) PRIVATE

Transactions must be truly anonymous with no possibility of corporate big data or governments using the blockchain to infer holdings, transaction participants or buying patterns.  Absolute crypto-privacy is still a work in progress, but a few pioneering crypto-currencies have taken up the challenge.

Foremost among these is Monero, in which all transaction data is completely private.  A couple other crypto-currencies – Zcash (ZEC) and Dash (DASH) – share some privacy attributes, although not quite to the same extent as Monero.

 

4) INEXPENSIVE (TO TRANSACT)

It must cost less than 10 cents to process a transaction. This would allow micro-transactions of just a couple dollars to be viable – an absolute requirement for any crypto-currency that wants to become truly mainstream.  It would also help the crypto in question to displace credit card transactions, where the VISA/MasterCard duopoly often charges 2% to 4% in fees, plus additional fees if foreign currency exchange is involved.

Many different crypto-ecosystems have already achieved this precondition for a commercially-successful digital currency.  According to this March 2018 article by The Motley Fool, Tron (TRX), Ripple, EOS (EOS) and Bitcoin Cash (BCH) all had transaction fees of less than $0.01.

 

5) FAST (TO TRANSACT)

The perfect crypto-currency must be able to process substantially all transactions in 5 seconds or less.  This would allow it to be used with confidence for internet purchases or international commerce.  Right now Nano (NANO), Stellar (XLM) and Steem (STEEM) meet this stringent criteria, while Ripple gets close with a transaction time of around 10 seconds.

However, I do believe it is important to note that transaction speed (how long it takes to process a transaction) is a separate issue from scalability (the number of transactions a crypto-network can process at peak load).  It is absolutely possible for a crypto to be very fast when its network is lightly loaded, but slow to a snail’s pace when transaction volume picks up.  Of course, the perfect crypto-currency would complete every transaction very quickly, regardless of network loads.

 

6) SCALABLE

It must be able to process 50,000 to 100,000 transactions per second.  If any crypto-currency ever hopes to displace our antiquated 20th century payment system, it has to be capable of significantly beating VISA’s 24,000 transactions per second.

I predicate this on the idea that a mainstream digital currency would have very strong worldwide demand, with a user base of anywhere from hundreds of millions to billions of individuals.  Murphy’s Law dictates that at some point in the future, everyone will try to buy their morning coffee with their crypto at exactly the same time.  Therefore, being able to outperform VISA’s current network throughput is a necessity.

Although no crypto-currency clears this significant technical hurdle yet, Ripple gets an honorable mention with its capacity to process approximately 1500 transactions per second.  I suspect new technological refinements will propel us past this benchmark in the next decade or two.

 

7) ENERGY EFFICIENT

The blockchain (or equivalent technology) used to process transactions must use as little energy as possible.  While it was initially an afterthought in the crypto-space, energy efficiency has gained increasing attention with the revelation that Bitcoin mining alone uses a staggering 73 TWh of energy per annum – the same amount of electricity used by the entire country of Austria.  As if that wasn’t enough, the British newspaper The Guardian recently released an article that claims Bitcoin mining consumes more energy than the copper, gold and platinum mining industries combined!

It stands to reason that it is unwise to waste electricity if we don’t need to, particularly on such a grand scale.  Therefore, having our perfect crypto-currency’s blockchain be as energy efficient as possible is a reasonable requirement.  In addition, I think it is vital to save our computing energy for the next item on the list.

 

8) A STORE OF VALUE

Processing the blockchain should not only tally up transactions, but also create computationally-expensive intellectual property that is of broad use to mankind. This could take the form of medical simulations, geologic mapping, astrophysics calculations or climate modeling, to name just a few possibilities. In addition, immediately after its creation via the blockchain mining process, this intellectual property must enter the public domain where it can be freely leveraged by any corporation, individual or non-profit group who wishes to use it.

This requirement is by far the most technically challenging of the 8 that I have listed.  However, cracking it will endow the winning crypto with the Holy Grail for all digital currencies – intrinsic value.  This would remove the last great disadvantage inherent in crypto-currencies – their ephemeral, purely-digital nature – and allow them to compete head-on with more traditional stores of value such as precious metals.

If you are interesting in reading more about this tantalizing possibility, I touched on it in an article titled “Blockchain 3.0 and the Problem with Bitcoin“.

 

Conclusion

So far I believe that the crypto-community has definitively solved my first two requirements (security and a low inflation rate).  I think the next three (privacy, low transaction cost and quick transactions) are in the process of being solved.  Scalability and energy efficiency, in contrast, are proving to be difficult hurdles.  And the final requirement for my perfect crypto-currency – that it be a store of value – is still just a fevered dream.

Perhaps even more importantly, all of these desirable attributes must be rolled up into a single crypto-currency before it can truly be competitive with existing fiat currencies.  In my opinion, we have a ways to go yet in crypto-land.

 

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Do People Know the Value of Physical Assets?

Do People Know the Value of Physical Assets?

Do people understand the value of physical assets?  Or has the very idea of money become so twisted in the modern era that we have lost sight of fundamental value?

Everybody knows that gold, silver, gemstones and other precious materials are valuable – potentially very valuable.  But knowing this tidbit of information from an academic standpoint and truly understanding it in a practical sense are two very different things.

I recently stumbled across a fascinating social experiment video posted by YouTuber Mark Dice.  In the video Mark walks the streets of Encinitas, California (a northern suburb of San Diego), offering to give pedestrians either a free Snickers candy bar or a free 1/10 troy ounce American Gold Eagle coin.

I won’t leave you in suspense.  A depressingly large number of people choose the free candy bar, with a retail value of about $1, over the solid gold coin, with a bullion value of around $140 at the time.

Of course, there were a few canny individuals who scooped up their free gold coin.  Even though Mark skillfully edited out these encounters, you know they happened because he has more or less run out of gold coins by the end of the experiment.

But it is still amazing to note that Mark appears to have given away substantially more candy bars than gold coins!  And this is in spite of the fact that everyone from kindergartners to senior citizens “knows” that gold is valuable.

I recently had my own personal experience with an average person failing to recognize the monetary value of precious metals.

I went garage sale picking and was lucky enough to discover a set of Gorham sterling silver flatware that was attractively priced.  In fact, it was so attractively priced that it was selling for well below bullion value.

But the interesting part of this story is that the woman selling the sterling flatware had clearly labeled it as sterling silver.  She definitely knew that it was solid silver.  And when I showed interest in the set, she declared that she had “looked it up online” to verify it was actually sterling.

In the final analysis, the garage sale woman simply didn’t understand the value of physical assets – in this case, silver.

But these situations got me thinking.  It has been 50 years since the U.S. dollar was linked to either gold or silver.  U.S. silver certificates were last exchangeable for silver in June 1968.  Then President Richard Nixon irrevocably severed the connection between the dollar and gold in August 1971.

Anybody who was born after the mid 1960s has no personal experience with precious metals as money.  This means that about 2/3 of Americans have never lived in a world where gold and silver were considered money.  It is a similar story in other developed nations as well.

So is it any wonder that people have no idea of the value of physical assets?

I don’t believe that the systematic demonetization of gold and silver was a historical accident driven purely by exigent financial circumstances.  Instead, it is apparent that our financial authorities have gone to great lengths to dissociate the entire concept of money from physical commodities like precious metals.

Floating the U.S. dollar has created a consequence-free, spendthrift wonderland for politicians, allowing the Federal Government to run almost continuous deficits since the 1960s.  In addition, this policy has freed the Federal Reserve to pursue progressively easier monetary policies over the decades, culminating in massive interest-free loans for the too big to fail banks during the last financial crisis.

But perhaps the most deleterious side effect of pure fiat money is the distorted perception of value introduced via our serial bubble economy.

At the turn of the millennium, “new economy” tech stocks were assigned absurdly high valuations by the market.  Examples include online retailer Pets.com (now bankrupt) and internet incubator CMGI (now renamed Steel Connect, Inc. and trading for under $2 a share).

During this bubble, gold and silver traded at multi-decade, generational lows.  You could hardly give precious metals away.

After the original tech-bubble burst, the Fed quickly inflated a rebound housing bubble via its infinitely expandable money supply.  Frenzied speculators bid hundreds of thousands of dollars for bare-bones Miami condos and hastily constructed McMansions in the Las Vegas desert.

The housing bubble was even more destabilizing than its predecessor.  When it finally burst, the global economy nearly ground to a halt.  Gold and silver finally caught a bid, although they were still massively undervalued during this time.

But the Fed wasn’t done punishing average people yet.  Unwilling to admit its loose monetary policies were gradually hollowing out the U.S. economy, the Fed embarked on yet another ill-advised bubble-chasing episode.  This time, they flooded the financial markets with unnecessary, counter-productive liquidity via “Quantitative Easing” – another name for money printing.

This created the bubble we are currently living in, which is sometimes called “The Everything Bubble”.  At this point, our concept of money has become so divorced from reality that paying hundreds or thousands of dollars for largely imaginary crypto-currencies seems like a good idea.  Compared to that, buying a share of Amazon for $1,600 or Netflix for $350 appears downright sane, even if it isn’t.

Of course, as in every financial bubble before, physical assets like precious metals and gemstones have been left wallowing in obscurity.  Right now you can buy an ounce of platinum for the same price it was back in 2004 – fully 15 years ago.  Despite the fact that the price of silver has risen by a factor of 3 over the past 20 years, it is still trading near multi-century valuation lows.  The perennially overlooked gemstone spinel – a close cousin to rubies and sapphires – is available for shockingly inexpensive prices.

But most people have been steeped in our modern-day witch’s brew of fiat currencies, bubble economics and manufactured desirability (think Apple’s iPhone) for so long that they no longer understand the monetary value of truly rare physical assets.

I firmly believe that this dynamic will fully reverse one day.  But in the meantime, savvy investors can scoop up tremendously beautiful and desirable physical assets for laughably low prices.

 

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Adventures in Buying a CCT Silver Slide

Adventures in Buying a CCT Silver Slide

One of the quirks of alternative investing is that you end up researching some pretty strange things.  For example, I recently embarked on a silver bullion buying spree.  But that isn’t the unusual part of my story.  The weird part is what I stumbled upon when I looked for a simple and reliable silver counterfeit detection method.  I discovered a device called the CCT silver slide.

 

What is a CCT silver slide?

Simply put, a CCT silver slide is a quick and easy way to test silver bars and coins for fakes or counterfeits.  The bullion market has been hit by an absolute flood of counterfeit Chinese silver coins and bars over the past decade.  The worst part of this plague is that China’s manufacturing prowess has allowed it to make increasingly sophisticated fakes, some of which are impossible to distinguish from genuine pieces by looks alone.

Almost every bullion piece you can imagine has been imitated by the Chinese, including very popular products such as American silver eagles, Australian Perth Mint products and Sunshine Minting silver bars.  So having an effective way to weed out counterfeit silver is absolutely vital for the precious metal stacker.

 

How does a CCT silver slide work?

The device works on the twin principals of diamagnetism and electrical conductivity.  These create an effect known as the eddy current brake.  If you place a very strong magnet on an inclined silver surface, it will only slide down it very slowly.  Likewise, a silver coin placed on a large, inclined magnet will also slide quite slowly.  Most other metals will not behave this way, even if they are plated with a layer of pure silver.  Ferrous metals will stick to the magnet while cupro-nickel, brass and zinc alloys will descend quickly, with little or no hesitation.

This video gives a good demonstration of a CCT silver slide in action:

 

 

My adventures in buying a CCT silver slide

My story begins a few months ago when I began expanding my silver holdings.  Even though I was buying from reputable dealers, I soon realized that it would be wise to spend some money on diagnostic equipment.  Once I discovered the simplicity and usefulness of a CCT silver slide, I knew I had to have one.

Now this is where things got interesting.  CCT is an acronym that stands for “Cyber Curtain Twitcher”, a pseudonym for a gentleman silver stacker who resides in the United Kingdom.  This colorful man has an unusual YouTube channel where he and an assistant torture and destroy counterfeit coins in a myriad of gruesome ways.  I found his quirky brand of humor to be quite entertaining.

CCT is the personal creator of each and every one of his eponymous silver slides.  Yes, there are other silver slides currently on the market.  But to the best of my knowledge, Cyber Curtain Twitcher was the very first person to conceive of the silver slide idea as a simple, non-destructive testing method to distinguish fake silver coins from genuine ones.  He also constructs his slides to much higher standards than his competitors (which is obvious if you read through the build quality section further down in this article).

I wanted the best of the best – an original CCT silver slide.

 

2025 Update

CCT now offers his eponymous silver slides for sale directly via eBay!  I have a link to his products towards the bottom on this article.  This supersedes the section of the article I wrote below, but I’ve left it in for historical accuracy.

 

However, CCT has no dedicated website or formal sales platform for his product.  In addition, there was only one way to contact the man – through the comments section of his YouTube channel.  When I did, he informed me that the U.S. distribution of his slides is exclusively handled by an associate named “Mr. Vegiita” (another pseudonym, of course).

At this point, things began feeling a little cloak and dagger.

Apparently the only way to get in touch with Mr. Vegiita is also through his YouTube channel comments.  When I contacted him this way, Mr. Vegiita informed me that as soon as he received a slide shipment from CCT, he would post a video advertising them for sale.  I just needed to post my comment requesting a slide below one of those videos.

Then the waiting game began.

About a week later, Mr. Vegiita finally uploaded a video stating that some slides were available.  Unfortunately, my YouTube notification didn’t get pushed through, so I was a bit slow in discovering this.  I rushed to Mr. Vegiita’s YouTube channel and left my comment, only to discover that I was too late!  All of the slides had been sold out in the 24 hours since he had posted the video.

But I would not be denied.

Mr. Vegiita offered to put me on a waiting list – a proposal that I readily agreed to.  After waiting a couple more weeks, I received a notification letting me know he had just gotten a few more silver slides in stock in my choice of oak, utile or idigbo hardwood at $80 each on a first come, first served basis.  I sent him the money via PayPal before I even found out if my preferred wood was still available in the desperate hope that shoving the cash into his hands (shut up and take my money!) would obligate him to deliver me something.

Luckily, the utile wood version I wanted was still up for grabs!  Utile, otherwise known as Sipo Mahogany, is an African tropical hardwood exported primarily from Cameroon, Ghana and Congo.  Utile is a beautiful, dark reddish-brown color with a pronounced grain pattern that looks a lot like Honduran Mahogany.  This is because Sipo Mahogany is actually a distant relative of the Swietenia (true mahogany) genus.

Mr. Vegiita was a man of his word and promptly mailed my slide, which I received just a few days later.

I had finally got hold of an elusive CCT silver slide!  And it was everything I dreamed it would be.  But that isn’t surprising considering the attention to detail that Cyber Curtain Twitcher puts into every slide.

 

CCT silver slide build quality

CCT handcrafts his silver slides from a variety of fine temperate and tropical hardwoods in his UK workshop.  The slide portion is constructed from a series of ultra-high strength rare earth magnets laid in parallel.

These N52 neodymium magnets are the most powerful commercially available magnets in the world.  In fact, they are so powerful that people with pacemakers are advised to handle the CCT silver slide (or any other product that contains rare earth magnets) with care, because its magnetic field could potentially disrupt an implanted cardiac device.

CCT then adds a soft felt layer over the magnets so that your bullion won’t get scratched as it slides down the ramp.  He finishes the wood frame with a durable, yet attractive 5-coat melamine lacquer finish.  Finally, he laser engraves a logo on the back that reads “CCT Silver Slide” to brand it as one of his handmade originals.

 

CCT Silver Slides for Sale on eBay

(This is an affiliate link for which I may be compensated)

 

The limitations of a CCT silver slide

Of course, no single precious metal counterfeit detection method is foolproof.  And the CCT silver slide is no exception to this rule.  A silver-plated slug of pure copper (which is also diamagnetic and highly conductive) will slide down a rare earth magnet ramp in much the same way as a real silver coin.  Pure gold will also behave like pure silver, although this is generally a non-issue because no one would bother to counterfeit a low-value silver coin by silver plating a much more expensive gold coin.

A CCT silver slide also can’t readily distinguish between silver coins of different finenesses.  Although a coin or bar of lower silver content should traverse the slide almost imperceptibly faster than a higher purity one, you would need a stopwatch to have any hope of telling the difference.  In effect, a 50% or 80% silver coin will behave very similarly to a 90% or 99.9% silver coin (especially if the alloying metal is copper).

In addition, a silver coin struck in very high relief will slide down the ramp faster than expected because there is less surface area in direct contact with the magnets.  Therefore the eddy current braking effect does not have an opportunity to fully engage.

And while a CCT silver slide is the perfect size for testing fractional silver and 1 troy ounce coins and bars, it won’t work well on larger silver bullion.  Yes, it can accommodate 2 troy ounce bars and rounds, but once you get much larger than that you are better off using a small, button-shaped rare earth magnet directly on the test item’s surface.

Because of these (admittedly minor) drawbacks I advise every silver stacker to use at least two different counterfeit detection methods when buying silver bullion.  The ping test, weight test, density test and acid test are all viable alternatives.  A CCT silver slide combined with one of these other, complementary tests will eliminate practically every fake silver coin or bar that you might encounter.

On the whole, I would highly recommend an original CCT silver slide (or, barring that, a small rare earth magnet) to anyone interested in purchasing silver bullion.  CCT – that mysterious silver stacker from the United Kingdom – makes a great product at a great price point.  The money you save avoiding fake silver is well worth the cost.

 

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