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Ignore the perception of the possible future value. The real answer is that (barring any future laws that might relate to one and not the other) the value isn't going to increase significantly enough for you to consider it an "investment". Therefor, the real question boils down to which one you want to own, if you have to choose between the two. Which one will you enjoy more?
Once you've made that decision, if you trade then base the trade on current value. You can't deal down a new car with the dealer based on what it will be worth in five years, or base the selling price on your house by what property values might do in the next decade, either. Why would selling a gun be different? The question is current value, and you've already researched that.
Once you've made that decision, if you trade then base the trade on current value. You can't deal down a new car with the dealer based on what it will be worth in five years, or base the selling price on your house by what property values might do in the next decade, either. Why would selling a gun be different? The question is current value, and you've already researched that.