US $5.00 gold coin

Discussion in 'Bullion Investing' started by shaggy240v, May 30, 2009.

  1. shaggy240v

    shaggy240v Junior Member

    I picked this coin up last summer from my local coin shop for about $88.00 plus tax. I've been told that these coins stopped minting early and that this might be worth substantially more than the gold spot. Can anyone here confirm this?

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  3. Cloudsweeper99

    Cloudsweeper99 Treasure Hunter

    You bought for a great price. The $5 coins usually seem to sell for more than spot anyway. I can't confirm whether the mintage is low, but gold coins don't seem to develop big premiums as easily as other coins. I suspect this might be because few people collect gold by the usual date/mintmark method.
     
  4. Blue Angel

    Blue Angel Senior Member

    I just sold one for $125.
     
  5. CentDime

    CentDime Coin Hoarder

    The picture is small but if it is a 2008 and has a small W under the 2008 then it is a low mintage coin. Those were only sold from the mint directly, the regular 2008 without a W were sold by dealers.

    My guess is the one you have has no W so is the high mintage coin though.
     
  6. ammesmith

    ammesmith New Member

    If it include tax then it may be of $88.00.But you should had to confirm about spot price of this coin before buying,Because $88.00 is very large amount than $5.00.
    ____________________________________________________________
    Looking for the coins click: gold Krugerrand and Krugerrand gold coins
     
  7. Hobo

    Hobo Squirrel Hater

    Amme,

    You do realize, don't you, that the $5 gold coin has much, much more than $5 worth of gold. At today's value of gold ($1,425/oz) the 1/10 oz. of gold in the coin is worth $142.50. Plus you have dredged up a thread that is almost 2 years old. In May 2009 gold was around $850/oz. so $88 for 1/10 oz of gold was a fair price.

    By the way, welcome to CoinTalk.
     
  8. imrich

    imrich Supporter! Supporter

    Veeery Interesting!!

    I find responses to older posts quite interesting, as although investors seem to follow Silver prices, it appears that there it significantly less attention to Gold coin prices. At the time of this post there is a dealer purchasing the 1/10 ounce $5 Gold coin for ~$154.75. Although Silver has had a meteoric ~130% increase in pricing value, Gold has had a respectable ~70% increase. How high can the
    prices rise before sanity prevails? :rollling:
     
  9. DallasCoins

    DallasCoins New Member

    Liberty $5 Gold Coin - no date?

    I found this post and have the same coin as Shaggy except when I was looking at mine I realized there is no date on it? Where Shaggy had 2008 on his I have the following roman numbers: MCMLXXXVII. On the back it looks like I have MB above the G in 'gold' and below the nest, to the right of this I believe JW above the 5 and below the baby eagle in the nest.

    What does this mean for me?

    Robert
     
  10. Danr

    Danr Numismatist

  11. Hobo

    Hobo Squirrel Hater

    Robert, when the started making AGE (American Gold Eagles) they used a Roman Numeral Date. The novelty quickly wore off (probably because it is more difficult to read the date in Roman Numerals, especially on very small coins) and they changed over to Arabic Numerals. All AGEs 1987 were dated MCMLXXXVII so the Roman Numerals do not add anything to the value.
     
  12. Cloudsweeper99

    Cloudsweeper99 Treasure Hunter

    The gold price is a reflection of unsane monetary policy. When monetary policy returns to sanity, so will gold.
     
  13. fatima

    fatima Junior Member

    They have crossed the event horizon. There is no mathematical possibility they can return the $ to historic levels so they will keep doing what they have been doing. Gold will continue to rise and will continue to be an effective hedge against wealth erosion.
     
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