Exactly. Those are snoozefests It didn't actually sell out in 75 seconds, it maybe could have but their system is really bad and can't handle that volume. It was most like somewhere between 10-15 minutes with all the lag. Sure you can, it gets people excited. Not really. More people get bored with products that are constant losers price wise, over minted etc than this. People actually got excited about this
I gave up trying to pay for the enhanced eagle so I changed my order and bought all 20,000 River-of-No-Return 5 oz. pucks instead. Take that, you flippers!
So it is obvious that the U S Mint is not producing for collectors. It is all about the flipping and big dealer profits. I personally don't consider these products to be part of any "set". They are novelties. Like I said earlier, tomorrow there will be dealers with hundreds available.
If they were producing for U S Mint profit they would have put the limit higher. It's like everything else that is government related, big business and lobbyists are in control.
Not exactly. They need to have high excitement products every now and then in order to generate interest and publicity etc. It's basically the coin world version of running a happy hour special.
Unfortunately there is an endless supply of ignorant hopeful new flippers to replace the current flippers that lose money and stop flipping. Unfortunately there is an endless supply of naive collectors to replace those collectors that no longer play the game of being shutout at the mint store and being stupid enough to pay the outrageous premiums to the flippers for this crap. Former flippers and former collectors meanwhile sit back and bitch about it on CoinTalk. Life is good.
If limiting the mintage to 30K means people are willing to pay $400 apiece for these, you'd think the Mint would set the price to that. Or, conversely, if the price is set by legislation to be ~$60, they should've made more. I hesitate to call this "artificial" scarcity, given that the Mint is the only entity that determines mintage for any of its issues, but it's definitely undershooting demand, and I have to think that's intentional.