
In the aftermath of the
recent stories about
Tungsten-filled 10 ounce gold bars discovered in midtown Manhattan,
there have been two broad sentiments expressed by the precious metals
community: i) that this is as many have expected, and that of the
physical inventory in circulation, much is fake (particularly that held
in official hands, either via ETFs or in sovereign repositories which
for various reasons still can not be publicly assayed) and ii) is the
comfort that while it is relatively easy and cost-effective to use
tungsten to falsify larger gold bars and bricks, those who own primarily
gold coins are safe as for some reason, it is less economic, feasible
or widespread to counterfeit smaller precious metal denominations.
Sadly, while i) may be true, ii) is patently false. The proof comes
courtesy of a firm called
ChinaTungsten Online which
proudly markets its broad "tungsten-alloy services" including, you
guessed it, the gold plating of various tungsten formulations among them
"gold" bricks, bars and, yes, coins. Oh did we mention a Chinese
company
openly advertizes its tungsten gold-plating and precious metals replication services, something which the
tabloid media's
CTRL-C/V majors openly mock as improbable conspiracy theory. Well, as
they say, it is only conspiracy theory until it becomes conspiracy
fact.
(more)
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