5 investment lessons from TED’s video about Gold. A TED-Ed video by David Lunney
13/10/2015Daniel Fisher
Free & fully insured UK Delivery. Learn more
Secure & flexible payments. Learn more
Buyback Guarantee Learn more
Can we learn any investment lessons from TED-Ed’s facinating video posted online late last week? CERN Scientist David Lunney discussed the scientific history of gold, explaining how the precious metal actually comes from space, and the efforts of science and mining to find or create more. You can watch the full video below.
During the video, Mr Lunney highlights several points surrounding the creation of gold and shows us that, although it is technically possible, even modern scientific techniques would take millions of years to produce just one single gram of gold!
The video also discusses the limits of traditional mining when it comes to accessing the gold already on the planet. For example; did you know that the amount of gold mined so far – in the history of gold mining – would only fill three Olympic swimming pools. That’s in a period spanning several thousand years!
Here are a few other valuable investment lessons we can derive from this educational video:
1. However much wed like to produce more gold, we’ve been trying for years and its not really possible. This differentiates gold from paper currency, where quantitative easing simply prints more!
2. The fact that gold comes from supernovas helps explain two important elements. Firstly that its unlikely to happen again any time soon – therefore we can only mine what we currently have on the planet. Secondly, that there is some basis for golds mystical appeal, given that it doesn’t come from this planet!
3. We’ve mined gold for thousands of years and we can still only fill three swimming pools. This demonstrates the limitation of gold supply and why its called precious!
4. Mining in the sea is too expensive and time consuming to make it worthwhile, meaning were limited to mining the land.
5. Even technology cant produce more gold. Particle separators would take millions of years to produce just 1g of gold.
Certainly we’d conclude its much easier to buy a coin now, rather than wait millions of years for that large hadron collider to produce a nugget or two!
If you would like to talk to Physical Gold about owning a portion of the worlds precious (and limited) gold, then you can speak with one of our specialist gold consultants by completing the form here, emailing info@physicalgold.co.uk or calling us on 020 7060 9992.
Live Gold Spot Price in Sterling. Gold is one of the densest of all metals. It is a good conductor of heat and electricity. It is also soft and the most malleable and ductile of the elements; an ounce (31.1 grams; gold is weighed in troy ounces) can be beaten out to 187 square feet (about 17 square metres) in extremely thin sheets called gold leaf.
Live Silver Spot Price in Sterling. Silver (Ag), chemical element, a white lustrous metal valued for its decorative beauty and electrical conductivity. Silver is located in Group 11 (Ib) and Period 5 of the periodic table, between copper (Period 4) and gold (Period 6), and its physical and chemical properties are intermediate between those two metals.