Mike Rowe

Mike visits a mint to learn how coins are made

Mike goes behind the scenes at a world-class mint to learn how high-quality gold and silver coins are made.

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Mike Rowe

Mike asks why owning gold makes sense today

Mike sits down with U.S. Money Reserve’s thought leadership team to find answers to his questions about owning gold and other precious metals.

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Mike Rowe

Mike visits a vault with over $1 billion in precious metals

Mike joins former U.S. Mint Directors Philip N. Diehl and Edmund C. Moy at a secure undisclosed location to learn more about owning precious metals.

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Latest Videos
  • Mike learns about two ways to own physical gold

    Mike sits down with U.S. Money Reserve’s thought leadership team to learn about the two paths of physical gold ownership: owning gold at home and holding gold in an IRA.

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  • Mike discusses the client experience at U.S. Money Reserve

    Mike visits U.S. Money Reserve to learn about our unique approach to the precious metals ownership experience.

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  • Mike asks a financial advisor why he recommends gold

    Mike sits down with a financial advisor to discuss the role gold can play in a diversified portfolio and why many financial advisors don’t suggest physical gold to their clients.

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  • Mike asks about gold’s growth potential

    Mike sits down with U.S. Money Reserve’s thought leadership team to learn more about the growth opportunities provided by gold.

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  • Mike learns why governments are buying record amounts of gold

    Mike sits down with U.S. Money Reserve’s thought leadership team to learn how record demand from central banks is influencing the price of gold.

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  • Mike learns what de-dollarization means for gold

    Mike sits down with U.S. Money Reserve’s thought leadership team to learn about BRICS, the de-dollarization movement, and their relationship to gold.

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  • Mike learns how geopolitics impact gold demand

    Mike sits down with U.S. Money Reserve’s thought leadership team to get a better understanding of how and why geopolitical conflict drives gold demand and prices higher.

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  • Mike learns what gold means in a world of digital currencies

    Mike sits down with U.S. Money Reserve’s thought leadership team to get a better understanding of how and why geopolitical conflict drives gold demand and prices higher.

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  • Mike learns how cybercrime threatens U.S. banking systems

    Mike sits down with U.S. Money Reserve’s thought leadership team to learn how hostile cyber threats put critical U.S. infrastructure at risk, and how gold can help protect wealth from the potential fallout.

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I’m thinking more today about how to protect the money I’ve earned.

I’ve learned a lot of things over the years, talking to all sorts of experts in all sorts of fields. But one of the most important lessons I learned was from two former Directors of the U.S. Mint, who taught me everything I needed to know about the importance of protecting my savings with physical gold and silver.

The thought of a diversified portfolio really didn’t cross my mind back when I was crawling through sewers under the streets of Chicago or up to my elbows in fish guts off the coast of Alaska.

But after 25 years of dirty jobs, I’m thinking less today about my next grimy adventure and more about how to protect the money I’ve saved along the way. And the more I learn, the better I feel about buying my gold and silver from the folks at U.S. Money Reserve.

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Elizabeth Altman is an associate professor of management at the University of Massachusetts Lowell, research affiliate at MIT’s Initiative on the Digital Economy, and guest editor for the Future of the Workforce at MIT Sloan Management Review. She has been a visiting professor at the U.S. Military Academy (West Point) and visiting scholar at Harvard Business School.

Altman’s research focuses on strategy, innovation, platforms, ecosystems, future of work, and workforce ecosystems. Her research has appeared in Business Review, MIT Sloan Management Review, Academy of Management Annals, Journal of Management Studies, and other international journals. Prior to academia, Altman was a Motorola vice president.

Elizabeth J. Altman
Associate Professor of Management, Manning School of Business
UMass Lowell
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