Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submitlogin

Pfft, why settle for a 1oz bar when you can get a

Mother and Baby Kangaroo 2023 2oz Gold Bullion Coin

https://www.perthmint.com/shop/bullion/bullion-coins/mother-...

from the Perth Mint?

( Or Dillon Gage, Texas: https://dillongage.com/coins/perth-kangaroo/ )

Buy one for your mother and two for your girlfriend, they're so cute you'll want more!

Don't turn over if you're not into monarchies

Caveats when biting the gold: https://www.perthmint.com/news/media-announcements/corporate...



I love the idea of coins, but I wish they didnt have a value written on them - 200 AUD in that case - about 30x less than its material value.

I can just imagine someone inheriting my coins and spending them for face value!


> I can just imagine someone inheriting my coins and spending them for face value!

self-deprecating joke about your genes :)


Heh, could well be myself in older age (or even the next week, maybe...) :D


Surprised you didn't go with the 5oz 'Super Pit' at $9,500 USD.

https://www.perthmint.com/shop/bullion/bullion-coins/super-p...

The regent on the obverse is a standard feature of all Australian coins.


As it is a 2023 coin, why doesn't it have Charlie?


I like that Perth Mint considers "Australian legal tender" a feature of a $6,000 coin


The British mint explains that this makes their bullion coins exempt from capital gains tax: https://www.royalmint.com/invest/bullion/uk-coin-ranges/sove...

There are probably similar rules in other countries.


thanks for the info, I hadn't realised that it's so blantant easy to avoid tax like that


It's a 'feature' 49 coins @ $200 each is less than $10,000 in legal tender and doesn't have to be declared as a cash transaction or carry on cash.

Also handy for reducing transfer taxes on house purchases - you can have a higly qualified QC (fancy lawyer) swear affidavits that they witnessed the purchase of a house for an absurdly low amount and therefore the required tax is correct despite being so low.


I don't think I'll be retaining you as my tax advisor.


As a point of law it comes down to jurisdiction and whether the gold loophole has been closed.

If a seller offers a house for $6,000,000 and an offer is made to pay $200,000 in legal tender of that country .. and the seller accepts ... what is the sales tax?

Is it calculated from the $200,000 in legal tender which was witnesed by officers of the highest standing, or is it calculated from the metal value of the coins ($6 million)?

You really don't want a tax advisor on this, you want an authoritive legal opinion.

It is a loophole that has been exploited in various countries at various times - but you'd want to be sure of current laws if you're tempted to go that route.




Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: