I could not agree more . If I am thinking about my investment I think about shares, commercial and residential property . If I think about my H&H , Rigby , Purdey and WR rifles I think about actually when / where I use them and my friends who accompany me . Great memories .
That philosophy is just fine, but it means that you’ll own less art and guns. Everyone has only so much money to dedicate to indulgent luxuries and only so much money to dedicate to traditional investments like stocks, bonds, metals, and real property.
I have a friend that is a fairly blue collar fellow. Wears sweat shirts and jean shorts with white tube socks and sneakers literally every day of his life. But he does enjoy wine quite a bit and he has an excellent palate. He buys collector grade wine when issued, drinks most of the case, and every 7-10 years he barters the last 1-2 bottles for another 1-2 CASES of high quality new issues. So wine is his thing, and he has a $25,000 a year wine habit, but his net-cost for his habit is very close to zero. I can relate to this mentality, because he views his passions in light of their alternative asset class, just like guns, watches, cars, and art.
The more conscientious you are about the indulgences you buy, the more of them you can enjoy. Or, you can just view a purchase as a one-way trip to the trash heap.
I have a million stories like these in my life, and they’ve covered my ass in many a pickle. I remember when my wife was pregnant with our first, it was 100 degrees out, and our A/C and furnace died. Needed a new Carrier furnace and Air Conditioner for $12,000. The business that came out to give the quote was asking me a lot about a set of jousting armor I had displayed in the corner. (I bought it for $75 at an estate sale when I was 16 and spent a month restoring it). I got the furnace and A/C, he got a suit of plate mail and a broad sword. I’d say it was a good ROI on my $75 over 15 years.
I try very hard not to make financial mistakes, and I do my best to educate other sportsmen to understand what a best gun is versus an expensive gun, cost and value don’t correlate.