Don't store your gold here
Storage facilities are running out of room as demand for the metal rises. Some customers have been turned away.
Gold's fantastic rise in price this year is causing a different kind of gold rush in New York -- a rush out the door of vaults and other storage facilities. Too many gold lovers are buying up the precious metal and then looking for a place to store it. You can't very well stick a gold bar under a mattress or into an old coffee can, you know.
Normally, people would turn to a place like HSBC, which owns one of the largest vaults around. But HSBC is giving its retail customers the boot to make room for higher-paying institutional customers, The Wall Street Journal reports.
So HSBC is sending its retail customers a message: Take your gold and get out.
But where to go? And how to get the gold there? That's the problem faced by many of HSBC's customers now. Some are hiring armored trucks to move gold coins and bars to vaults across the country.
"I have never seen any relocation like this," an executive at one depository company told the Journal.
The Journal article has some interesting details about moving and storing gold. The metal is sometimes shipped in plain boxes (as opposed to boxes that say "gold inside"?) and in trucks with several armed guards.
And gold vaults generally have 27-inch-thick steel-reinforced walls, according to the Journal. To get inside, you need to pass through a series of doors, with each one opening only after the previous door is locked.
Let's hope the article doesn't give gold thieves any ideas.
At any rate, the Journal reports that the demand for bars, coins and other types of physical gold is expected to soar 21% this year.
This could create some opportunities for new gold storage companies, but the problem is that storing gold really isn't that profitable. One major depository only charges $12 per month for a 100-ounce gold bar.
| Tags: | goldHSBCKim Peterson |
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