78ish million for the gold, and 50 Million for the money.
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Kolanaki@pawb.social 3 hours ago
What denomination are the bills and how much does each brick of gold weight? Cuz I mean, if the bills are high enough, like $5000s they might be worth more than the gold.
_stranger_@lemmy.world 3 hours ago
Themosthighstrange@lemmy.world 2 hours ago
a hundred dollar bill weighs a gram and is worth $100, a gram of gold is worth $145. However you’ll pay income tax on the gold profit when you sell to get your cash.
beepbeeplettuce@lemmy.dbzer0.com 31 minutes ago
To be fair, I don’t know exactly how we’re getting this cash, but chances are it’s also taxable. Maybe you could get away with it, but that’s a lot of millions to hide.
Calfpupa@lemmy.ml 1 hour ago
Thats why you borrow against it :)
IzzyJ@lemmy.world 2 hours ago
You can see they’re in 100s
josephc@lemmy.ml 2 hours ago
A US $1 weighs 1g according to a random website I found on the Internet. I tested and it’s close enough.
As of today 2026/06/02, a gram of gold is worth about $140 assuming it’s minted and the purity is known.
That honestly surprises me. It means that gold and bills (assuming c-bills) are within an order of magnitude of each other.
Worst case with bill denominations: half a million. Best case with bill denominations: 50 million dollars.
Worst case with gold: $140/g less 10% worst case for verification and bulk buy discounts. $120/g ballpark. $60 million. Best case with gold: ~$70 million dollars upper bound for known minted purity.
So gold has the highest potential return but also the highest overhead.
I’d probably go gold. Even if I lost 50% due to overhead, I’d be able to pay my mortgage and my brother’s student loans and for my mum to live in a nice place.
Honestly, any of them would be a life changing amount of money.
stoly@lemmy.world 1 hour ago
I didn’t do the math but concluded that gold was the better value but harder to handle.