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April 30, 2009
If
you have ever bought a fake gold coin on eBay it can be a heart
wrenching experience... let me tell you! Fortunately, my story
has a happy ending (for me at least). After paying to get it
certified by one of the big coin graders (PCGS or NGC),
(I was told it was a fake) fortunately I was able to get my money refunded from the seller.
To
be fair to him, he didn't know it was a fake when he sold it, but
this is why you have to be careful... it was definitely not a "happy
ending" for him since he had bought it as real several years
earlier.
A
recent eBay search turned up 1,243 results for "replica gold". And
those are only the ones who are telling you that the gold is fake!
So, with the price of Gold on the rise how can you be sure you are
getting the real thing? In this article
Doug Hornig, Editor of
BIG GOLD
tells you what to look out for to protect yourself from fraud. --
All That
Glitters is NOT Gold – the truth about counterfeit gold
By Doug Hornig, Editor,
BIG GOLD
The Chinese
Fake It
| You probably remember movies about the Old
West, wherein a shady-looking character would offer to
exchange a gold coin for a horse, and the seller would bite
down on the coin to verify its authenticity. That was about
all you could do if you lacked proper assaying equipment and
had to make a snap judgment: depend on your teeth to tell
you whether the metal in your hand was sufficiently soft to
be genuine gold. |
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|
Fake Gold Bar |
The bite test is actually a pretty good one
since gold, despite being among the heaviest metals, is also very
soft. If you chomp down and shatter a tooth, it ain’t gold. But
before you go munching on your coin collection, you might want to
ask yourself, why bother?
Well, because of the Internet. While the Net
has become an indispensable resource and we’d never want to return
to the days when basic research meant a long day in the library, it
also has the ability to stir up a hornet’s nest of concern at the
drop of a stick.
One such hornet release followed the recent
publication of a three-part series by Coin World, dealing
with the subject of coin counterfeiting in China, where it’s
quasi-legal. Instantly, the Web was buzzing with the worries of
bloggers and eBay shoppers, and the pontifications of pundits about
this dire threat.
Before we got too worked up about it, first
thing we did was carefully read the source material. Yes, the
Coin World articles raise the issue, and they feature an
in-depth interview with one Chinese counterfeiter, although that’s
not what he calls himself. He’s a proud artisan who produces
replicas.
Of what? As it turns out, it’s primarily copies
of ancient Chinese coins, which are sold to tourists. A few fake
U.S. silver dollars are put up each week on eBay, but they are
required to carry a Replica stamp.
Do all Chinese counterfeiters abide by this
regulation? Perhaps not. But eBay has always been a place where
caveat emptor rules, so the best policy would probably be simply
to avoid coin purchases from China.
Problem Areas
Next, we consulted with our favorite dealer,
asking if they come across many fake bullion coins, such as Eagles
or Maple Leafs. The answer was no. They’ve only seen a
handful during their thirty years in business.
Not that it’s hard to do. With modern 3-D laser
imaging, a die can be created that mimics the real thing in perfect
detail. The good news is that it’s impractical. The difficulty is
that any counterfeit bullion coin would likely have to be gold in
order to pass. If it were pure, then the profit margin would be too
small to make the deal worthwhile. And if the counterfeiter skimped
on the gold content, the coin’s weight would be a dead giveaway.
The only alternative would be to gold-plate a
coin made out of some other metal. But again, getting the weight
right while preserving the correct size would be a challenge.
Which brings us to the areas where
counterfeiting can be a real problem. The most significant is rare
coins. These can be made with the proper gold (or silver) content,
then artificially aged so that only an experienced numismatist could
pick them out. Because of the premium they command, rare coins made
with real gold would be highly profitable where a bullion coin would
not.
This
is one of the reasons (disinterested grading is the other) why many
collectors will only trade coins graded and slabbed by third-party
specialists like Professional Coin Grading Service (PCGS) or
Numismatic Guaranty Corp. (NGC).
Ominously, though, some counterfeit coins are
turning up inside phony slabs. If you collect rare coins and have
any reason to suspect them, it’s pretty easy to sort the real slabs
from the fakes. Coin World provides illustrations on just how
to do that
here.
Gold bars are a different matter. Fakes do show
up in the market from time to time, and they’re hard to identify.
Generally speaking, counterfeiters don’t bother with the smaller
ones, which are stamped, numbered, and sealed. They concentrate, our
dealers tell us, on 1-kilogram or larger sizes. These are poured,
rather than stamped, and can be easily adulterated or even hollowed
out and filled with lead or some other metal. Compounding the
problem is a lack of standard weights, even among good delivery gold
bars. The “400-ounce” bar, for example, can vary anywhere from 390
ounces to 420.
How to
Protect Yourself
As noted, we don’t believe that there is a
serious issue with counterfeit bullion coins at the moment. But that
doesn’t mean that they don’t exist, nor does it mean that evolving
technology might not make them more profitable in the future than
they are now.
The best precaution is the simplest: deal with
someone you trust. Establish a relationship with a coin dealer who
has built a strong reputation, preferably over a matter of decades,
such as the dealers we recommend in
BIG GOLD. Buy from them,
even if you stumble across some mail order supplier who is charging
less of a premium.
For small bars, purchase only those that carry
the stamp of one of the known, trustworthy refiners, such as PAMP,
Credit Suisse, or Johnson Matthey. For bigger orders, ask your
dealer if they do assays. Reputable outfits generally assay bars
that are a kilogram or larger. If you want a 100-ounce bar, consider
buying direct from the Comex, which will also vault it for you. That
removes the assay requirement when you buy, but remember that if you
take physical delivery of a large bar, you’ll need an assay when you
sell. Do not, under any circumstances, buy a larger gold bar on the
Internet or from a private seller you don’t personally know.
If you’re still worried about a coin, there
are tests you can perform to check it out.
For gold, you can bite it, although you may
not want to mar the surface of the real thing. Silver coins you can
drop on the floor and they will ring; alloys won’t. The ring test is
less useful with gold, since 24-karat gold doesn’t ring; less than
22 karats does, but so does brass.
Size and weight are good measures. Make a list
of the diameters of genuine coins for comparison purposes. Get a
scale calibrated to hundredths of a gram. If a bullion coin weighs
light (or, possibly, heavy), it’s bogus. Here’s a
handy list of gold coins with all weights, diameters and
thicknesses: .
A good counterfeiter may be able to get all
other aspects of an adulterated coin right, but he won’t be able to
fake density. Gold has a higher specific gravity than other metals,
and you can test for that. Many Internet reference sites will tell
you how.
You could buy a commercial counterfeit
detector. They aren’t cheap, but will quickly and easily test for
weight, thickness, and diameter.
If you happen to have some nitric acid and are
a very careful person, you can drop your coin into a beaker-full. Base
metals will react, gold won’t.

Rare coins are more of a challenge. If that’s
where your interest lies, look for specimens that have been graded
and slabbed. Otherwise, there’s no substitute for experience.
Examine coins with a magnifying glass, heft them in your hand. Get
to know what the real deal looks and feels like. Read up on the
kinds of imperfections that characterize the phonies. Become your
own expert.
Precious metals are going to be attractive to
con artists, just like anything else of real value. But there are
some decent safeguards already built into the system. Supplement
them with your own knowledge and common sense, and it shouldn’t be
difficult to avoid becoming a victim.
Good thing you don’t really have to worry
about purchasing fake bullion coins… because it’s the best time to
buy gold, and maybe one of the last chances you get to buy at $800+
levels. Read our report on why ultra-low interest rates could make
gold rise to $1,500 (and higher) in the near future – and how you
can profit:
Click here to learn more.
Safeguard your money with
gold, gold ETFs and major gold stocks…
BIG GOLD tells you how.

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