Why E-currency and Gold Currencies ?
What Can You Do?
- Send and receive money instantly to family, friends and business
associates worldwide.
- Make online payments 24 hours a day from anywhere.
- Collect real-time online payments from sale of goods and services,
online games, auctions, etc.
- Easily exchange dollars for gold and vice versa.
Benefits To Users.
- FREE account signup.
- Real-time online payments.
- Send mass payments with one click.
- Standing Order payments.
- Email payments to any email address.
- Request payments from anyone with an email address.
- Perform one-time and recurring payments.
- Lower merchant fees than credit cards.
- Top Class security thanks to the PIN verification of spends.
What is a gold currency?
Basically it is a very simple concept. Gold is currently (at the
time of writing) around 444USD per ounce. Of course the value compared
to fiscal (dollars and cents) currency varies and has been as low
as 300USD per ounce and as high as 800USD per ounce. But the variation
is usually only a few cents or a dollar or two each day and not
particularly significant for people using gold as an immediate currency.
It does become important when one is using it as an investment or
holding on to it for any length of time and transacting in large
amounts perhaps. However carting around even an ounce of gold is
not very convenient. If you wish to purchase a product or service
for say, 100USD then it is difficult to break off a slice of gold
to that value and hand it over to the merchant.
There is another method however. Corporations such as e-gold, GoldMoney
and Pecunix operate on a basic principle of accounting. Without
going into the technicalities of it, all that happens is that you
open an account with either e-gold, GoldMoney, Pecunix or another
gold issuer and then you can fund your account with gold. Gold is
obtained from exchange providers who make a business simply converting
or transacting fiscal funds to gold and visa versa. More on exchange
providers later. The currency supplier holds in trust a quantity
of gold bars. These are usually 400 troy ounces (1 kilogram is equivalent
to 32.1507 troy ounces)the size of the internationally traded London
Good Delivery bar. The term “small bars” refers to bars
weighing 1000g or less. So gold issuers such as e-gold, GoldMoney
and Pecunix for example, supply and act as custodians on behalf
of clients who own a specific quantity of gold metal.. With this
system an account holder, who can be a consumer or a merchant, holds
a quantity of gold which may be anywhere from fractions of an ounce
to entire 400 ounce bars and their holding is represented as accounts
which display the value of gold held by that account holder. Transactional
history and balances are available upon inspection and a small fee
is charged for each transaction and for storage. This gold is in
the form of actual gold bars and held in escrow in banks around
the world. Each account holder actually ‘owns’ an amount
of that gold and this holding is reflected in his account. A consumer
can fund their account through one of the exchange providers set
up for this purpose and then ‘spend’ any amount, even
down to a penny, to a merchants account. The value of gold is then
transferred from the consumer’s account to the merchants.
The merchant can redeem his gold or ‘cash it in’ with
an exchange provider when he has sufficient.
Having opened your account with one of the currency suppliers (usually
free) you then ‘fund’ the account through an exchange
provider. If, for example you wanted 200 US dollars worth of gold
you would supplied that amount of dollars to the exchange provider
and he or she would fund your account with the gold to that value
less his commission. Your account would then show gold to the value
deposited in your account by the exchange provider. This is simply
a transfer of Gold Currencies and How to Use Them 7 ownership. The
gold is not moved. It stays in the bank vault. All that has happened
is the portion of one of those gold bars which was ‘owned’
by the exchange provider has now been transferred to you.
Of the gold bars resting in the bank vault, you would own a sliver
of one of those bars. The value of that 200 dollars worth of gold
may go up or down. If gold goes down compared to the US dollar your
gold ‘holding’ would reflect this in a slightly less
value, perhaps 190 dollars worth of gold. The actual gold does not
change. It continues to sit there. Only the value of it may change.
By the same token, if the price of gold rises dramatically then
your small sliver might suddenly be worth 240 dollars. But let’s
say that, having acquired the 200 dollars worth of gold, you then
decide to spend it on a nice up market DVD player available across
the country for 150 dollars. You don’t want to pay by check
or use your bank account. The retailer accepts e-gold so you simply
spend the 150 dollars to his account. This is an instant transaction
so the retailer is happy, he has his gold ithout waiting and at
a relatively small cost (usually the currency issuer will charge
a few cents for the transfer to the recipient). The ownership of
that amount of gold has now changed again. You still own a tiny
sliver of gold worth 50 dollars but the retailer now owns that portion
of the gold bar in the vault worth 150 dollars which you owned.
When you make your spend the currency suppliers software makes the
record in both accounts of the transfer of ownership. Sometimes
it is called gold credits. Presumably, of course, you will get your
DVD. There are some variations to the above and one can go into
the technicalities of how it works and for those keenly interested
there are some links and references at the back of the book. There
are some important factors to be aware of however.
Firstly, although the transactions are not expensive, especially
when compared to conventional systems such as banking, credit card,
Western Union and the like, there is still a cost to be considered.
Exchange providers traditionally charge anywhere between 2 and 15%
depending argely on how you fund them. If you use a credit card
to buy gold you will incur higher charges naturally. If you pay
cash then the charge will be less. Second, the transaction is instantaneous.
There is no ‘waiting period” for any party. Once the
’spend’, as it is called, is done the debit from your
account and the credit to the account you have spent to is done.
So it pays to ensure you do it accurately and not make any mistakes.
Third, the ‘spend’ is irrevocable. That is to say irreversible.
Not like a bank check which one can claim was falsely issued or
a credit card payment which one might claim was unauthorized. The
currency issuer will not reverse a transaction you make. One should
therefore be totally sure that one wants to make the spend and that
one is spending to the correct account. You cannot rely upon the
person you are spending to reverse it in the event of an error.
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