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nerdsniperyesterday at 10:37 PM4 repliesview on HN

We do not charge sales tax when you exchange Dollars for Euros. Bullion advocates argue that exchanging dollars for physical gold is a currency exchange rather than a consumption purchase.

If you were to turn that bullion into an actual product like jewelry, then it would be taxed.

When a firm with tank capacity takes delivery of an oil contract they secured via the CBRE, do they pay sales tax on that? No, because it’s intended for resale.

Unmonetized gold bullion is similarly generally intended for resale. Generally no one is “consuming” gold bullion.


Replies

AlotOfReadingyesterday at 10:56 PM

Currency exchanges are exactly why I differentiated between monetized and unmonetized bullion. I don't see why going to Costco and buying a bar of gold is fundamentally different than buying the same weight of gold jewelry. That jewelry may very well be intended for resale the same way.

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bwestergardyesterday at 11:04 PM

"Generally no one is “consuming” gold bullion."

Huh? Gold bullion is an input to hundreds of industrial processes. If it weren't, why would gold have any value?

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kristjanssonyesterday at 11:27 PM

> Bullion advocates argue that exchanging dollars for physical gold is a currency exchange rather than a consumption purchase.

One can argue that until they're blue, but it'd still be wrong. Gold is a commodity, and if you're buying it shell-packed at Costco you probably should be paying sales tax on it.