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Art for Your Wrist – Vintage Wristwatches

Art for Your Wrist - Vintage Wristwatches
Here is a fine example of a mid 20th century chronograph wristwatch in stainless steel with a Swiss movement and an original, unrestored dial.

Investing in today’s world can be a maddening proposition. The U.S. Federal Reserve has pegged short-term interest rates at near zero for several years running now. This means that savings accounts and short-term CDs earn meager rates of return and will continue to do so for the foreseeable future.

Some investors have reacted to these developments by transferring money from cash accounts and purchasing stocks. But with most U.S. equity indices having a dividend yield hovering around 2%, there is precious little protection against a downside move in stock prices. Indeed, the omnipresent prospect of a 20% to 50% draw-down in stocks should rightly give any reasonable investor pause.

Other investors have instead opted to move their cash into long-term bonds, where yields are somewhat higher. But the same problem exists here, although it is known by another name. In long-term bonds one takes on duration risk, which is the possibility that interest rates will rise substantially, driving the value of the bonds you hold down.

So in a certain sense choosing between stocks and bonds in today’s market is a lot like the plight faced by the Greek hero Odysseus. In the Homeric Odyssey, Odysseus was forced to sail his ship between the mythological sea monsters Scylla and Charybdis. To avoid one of the monsters meant facing the other. Likewise, if you navigate your financial ship to avoid one peril (duration risk in bonds) you expose yourself to another, completely different, but equally dangerous situation (the risk of a stock market crash).

Therefore, many investors today choose to wait things out, clinging to the safety of cash. While this approach has a great deal of merit, compelling alternatives do exist. Collectible, vintage wristwatches manufactured between approximately 1915 and 1975 are one of those often overlooked, yet incredibly intriguing alternatives.

Provided an investor already has a fully funded emergency account, allocating a percentage of one’s otherwise idle cash to a collection of fine vintage wristwatches could prove a wise choice. An heirloom quality wristwatch, if properly cared for, is unlikely to depreciate in value.

 

Vintage Omega Wristwatches for Sale on eBay

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With their elegant lines, sweeping curves and retro dials, vintage wristwatches evoke the sophisticated culture of a bygone golden age.  The cases of fine vintage wristwatches can be composed of either sterling silver or solid gold, varying in purity from 9 karat (37.5% fine gold) all the way up to 18 karat (75% fine gold). Platinum is occasionally encountered as well, although the price for these pieces is usually significantly higher.

Examples with gold-plated or gold-filled (a type of thick gold-plate) cases are less collectible and should be avoided. Stainless steel, a very common watch material today, began to be widely used in wristwatches starting in the 1940s.

Unlike today’s digital quartz watches, older mechanical watches keep time via a complex arrangement of gears, rotors and springs called the movement. In fact, the mechanical watch industry nearly went extinct in the 1970’s when the market was flooded by cheap, highly accurate quartz watches.

Vintage mechanical wristwatches can use either manually wound or automatic movements. As the name implies, automatic movements use the energy of the wearer’s everyday physical motions to automatically wind the watch.

Watch movements often reference the number of jewels they possess. Jewels are used in mechanical watches to reduce the friction between moving parts, thus increasing accuracy and reducing wear. Vintage watches typically have between 7 and 27 jewels, but a 17 jeweled watch is considered fully jeweled. Increasing the number of jewels beyond this point yields very little benefit.

A vintage watch’s value is partially dependent on the number of complications present in the movement. A complication is any time-keeping operation in addition to just hours, minutes and seconds. A date function, moon phase calendar and chronograph (stop-watch function) are all good examples of complications. Some watches can have a multitude of highly elaborate complications, making them very desirable to collectors.

The complexity of a functioning vintage wristwatch’s movement is a mesmerizing wonder, the culmination of several hundred years of innovation and old-world craftsmanship. In many ways a fine mechanical wristwatch is actually a miniature work of art that rests upon the wrist for all to see.

 

Vintage Chronograph Wristwatches for Sale on eBay

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There are a myriad of companies that produced very fine vintage wristwatches during the early to mid 20th century. Elgin, Gruen, Hamilton and Waltham are the most well-known U.S. brands and investment-grade examples of these watches can often be purchased quite reasonably today.

Most other collectible wristwatch manufacturers were Swiss in origin and include Audemars Piguet, Baume et Mercier, Breitling, Girard-Perregaux, IWC, Jaeger-LeCoultre, Longines, Omega, and Piaget. A few European watchmakers have even become synonymous with the finest quality: Patek Philippe, Vacheron Constantin and, of course, the ubiquitous Rolex.

While Rolex is the most well-known and popular of watch manufacturers today, it is important not to buy a watch strictly based on its brand. Brands naturally wax and wane in popularity over time. While Rolexes are high quality products, other watchmakers have created equally fine watches both historically and today.

High-quality vintage wristwatches serve dual purposes simultaneously. First, they can be a store of value, especially if the watch case is made of solid gold or silver. Second, they are a usable accessory that can be worn for special occasions. A well-made, vintage wristwatch is a subtle, yet instantly recognizable indicator of social status and refinement.

Nothing finishes a man’s formal attire more effectively than a classically styled, yet timeless dress watch. Similarly, a woman attending a formal event with an exquisite, sparkling period timepiece draped fashionably upon her wrist is sure to turn heads.

 

Vintage Hamilton Wristwatches for Sale on eBay

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Fine vintage wristwatches can vary wildly in price from just a few hundred dollars all the way to several million dollars, depending on condition, rarity, manufacturer, number of complications, case material, etc. However, high-quality, investment-grade examples in solid karat gold, sterling silver or stainless steel can readily be found in the $300 to $5,000 range with many fine specimens available under $1,000. These pieces would not only be functional and stylish, but also serve to diversify a more traditional investment portfolio composed of stocks and bonds.

 

Read more in-depth Antique Sage vintage watch investment guides here.


Nature’s Riches – Natural Gold Nuggets

Nature's Riches - Natural Gold Nuggets
A group of Australian gold nuggets displaying their characteristic honeycomb appearance. The iron-rich laterite matrix on some of the nuggets also confirms them as Australian in origin.

There is nothing worse than feeling stuck in life. It can be dehumanizing to be flat broke with no social life and a monotonous, dead-end job. But sometimes being stuck in a rut just means you need a new beginning.

In times past, Americans had a particularly effective way of dealing with this issue. They moved West. The Great American West represented a new beginning – a chance to reset everything that had gone wrong before. You could simply leave behind all of your disappointments and failures and boldly take a chance on yourself. In the wide open expanses of the sunny American West the sky – and opportunities – seemed to be endless.

And few physical objects manifest this pioneering spirit more thoroughly than natural gold nuggets.

Gold nuggets represent the opportunity and freedom of making a fresh start. A man who returned home from the wild American West, his pockets heavy with gold nuggets, had truly arrived. He had struck out to find his fortune and made his own way.

Nothing stoked the imagination of the 19th century public more than the idea of a remote, crystal-clear river peppered with glittering gold nuggets. And with good reason too; gold nuggets are nature’s depository of raw, unrefined riches. Their organically sculpted lines and warm metallic radiance are aesthetically pleasing at a primal level.

Gold is an extremely rare element, having an occurrence in the earth’s crust of approximately 3.1 parts per billion by weight. Gold ore from modern mines contains only microscopic specks of the noble metal; the contained gold is completely invisible to the naked eye. In fact, an open pit mining operation that yields just 2 grams of gold per ton of ore extracted is considered a rich mine.

Yet natural gold nuggets easily exceed even this remarkable rarity. It is estimated that only 3% of gold mined today is from alluvial (river) deposits. Most of this gold is in dust or flake form with only a minuscule fraction recovered as nuggets.

In addition, gold nugget discovery rates have been steadily declining by 5% to 10% every year for at least the last 30 years. This is despite considerable improvements in mining, dredging and metal detector technology during that time. Simply put, gold nuggets are nature’s winning lottery tickets and they are getting scarcer every year.

 

Australian Natural Gold Nuggets for Sale on eBay

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We normally think of nuggets as smooth, water-worn lumps of gold. And this is definitely the case when a nugget has been subjected to decades or even centuries of pounding hydraulic action in a swiftly flowing stream. However, not all natural gold nuggets have been through such harsh alluvial conditions.

Some examples possess well defined edges, almost giving them the appearance of crystallized honey. A few rare specimens even reveal gold’s marvelous cubic crystalline structure. Australian nuggets, often found in dry regions, sometimes display this intriguing, crystallized honeycomb look.

Incessantly scrubbed of impurities by the action of wind and water, gold nuggets are compact, knobby chunks of glistening, concentrated wealth. Gold’s incredibly high density of 19.3 grams per cubic centimeter means that nuggets are amazingly heavy for their size.

They typically range from 20 to 23 karats (83% to 96%) fine gold with primarily silver and small amounts of copper as alloying components. These trifling purity variances among nuggets generally have minimal impact on pricing. As a point of reference, gold nuggets are substantially finer than 14 karat (58%) or 18 karat (75%) gold used in higher end jewelry.

Gold was first discovered in Australia in 1851. Today, the arid, mineral rich continent is the undisputed leader in gold nugget production. Not only are more gold nuggets found in Australia than any other gold field in the world, but they also tend to be larger.

In fact, in 1869 the largest gold nugget every found was discovered in the state of Victoria, Australia. Called the Welcome Stranger, its total weight was a staggering 241 pounds (109 Kilograms). Australian gold nuggets are also renowned for their extremely high purity, commonly possessing finenesses in the mid 90% range. All of these factors combine to make natural gold nuggets from Australia highly collectible.

The Alaska/Yukon geographic area is the other great gold nugget region of the world. Gold was first discovered there in 1896, precipitating the famous Klondike gold rush. This historic gold rush conjures up images of grizzled prospectors wading knee deep into ice-cold streams surrounded by inhospitable wilderness in their relentless quest to wrest golden treasures from the unforgiving earth.

And this vision is largely correct; prospecting for alluvial gold in Alaska was, and remains to this day, incredibly brutal, dangerous work.

Natural gold nuggets from Alaska tend to be more water worn than their Australian brethren due to Alaska’s wetter climate. Alaskan nuggets also trend towards slightly lower purities than Australian nuggets, with finenesses commonly in the high 80% range. The slight differences in purity between Alaskan and Australian nuggets do not significantly impact desirability or pricing, however.

Although Australia and Alaska/Yukon are currently the two major global producers of gold nuggets, certain other historic gold mining districts are nugget rich as well. California, in particular, is inexorably linked with gold in the popular imagination. While large nuggets are rarely unearthed there today, small to medium sized nuggets are still found.

Many other states of the American West, such as Nevada, Arizona, New Mexico, Oregon, Idaho and Montana also produce natural gold nuggets sporadically. Occasionally gold nuggets come to market from other exotic locations like Venezuela, Russia, Mexico or British Columbia.

Sometimes gold is found still attached to its parent (matrix) rock. Quartz, with its characteristic milky-white, sugar-crystal appearance, is the most frequently encountered matrix material. Quartz has traditionally been a key indicator to astute prospectors that gold is nearby.

The other matrix rock commonly found associated with gold is laterite, an iron-rich mineral that is a rusty red or blackish color. Laterite infused nuggets are commonly of Australian origin.

Gold nuggets that have experienced significant weathering or alluvial action typically have either little or no matrix. Due to their tremendous rarity, gold specimens prominently embedded in their matrix can be very expensive. Attractive examples sell for far higher premiums over bullion value than comparable gold nuggets with little or no matrix.

 

Alaskan Natural Gold Nuggets for Sale on eBay

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While all gold nuggets are natural works of art, some are more captivating than others. Larger nuggets are not only more impressive than smaller sizes, but also much scarcer. For example, a 16 gram gold nugget is estimated to be almost 5 times rarer than its 4 gram counterpart. Consequently, only gold nuggets of more than 2 grams in weight should be considered for investment purposes.

Another characteristic to look for in a nugget is a rich, deep, golden color. Nuggets with a lower gold purity and high silver content may appear pale or washed out.

Shape can also be important, although this attribute is more in the eye of the beholder. Boring or awkwardly shaped gold nuggets are less desirable and sell for lower prices than interesting, attractive specimens. Tragically, before the hobby of gold nugget collecting became popular almost all nuggets were melted down for bullion. Prior to the early 1990s, vanishingly few specimens – usually larger, museum-grade pieces – survived.

To hold a gold nugget in your hand is to possess a great treasure. It represents millennia of relentless natural forces in combination with countless hours of exhausting labor from a shrewd, determined prospector. Gold nuggets are the embodiment of mankind’s pioneering spirit, sublimated into a small, gnarled lump of coveted precious metal. Given these attributes, it is no surprise that gold nuggets are worth considerably more than the intrinsic value of the gold they contain.

Premiums over bullion value run from approximately 30% for smaller sizes to perhaps 100% for impressively large nuggets. Specimens in quartz or other matrix rock often sell for even larger premiums. Pricing effectively starts at around $200 for investment grade examples with a minimum weight of 2 grams (with spot gold at $1,900 per ounce). If your investment portfolio needs a new beginning, then consider exploring a dazzling collection of exquisite, natural gold nuggets.

 

Read more in-depth Antique Sage bullion & gemstone investment guides here.