Athena/Owl Upgrade

Discussion in 'Ancient Coins' started by Al Kowsky, Mar 4, 2022.

  1. Al Kowsky

    Al Kowsky Well-Known Member

    Collectors thinking about upgrading their Athena/Owl tetradrachm might consider this coin offered by Heritage for $180,000 :p.

    Pan Pacific 1915 $50 gold.jpg
     
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  3. DonnaML

    DonnaML Well-Known Member

    Sure. I'll see if I have enough in my petty cash box.
     
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  4. Al Kowsky

    Al Kowsky Well-Known Member

    I'll lend you my lunch money for next week if that will help :D.
     
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  5. dougsmit

    dougsmit Member

    These sold for $100 in 1915 and you put it away in your sock drawer for these last 107 years (unless I miscalculated) the investment would have to have returned about 7% compounded continuously to yield $180k. They were sold originally for double face value (as were most commemoratives). Of course, that number would be reduced by the cost of slabbing. However, finding any investment over these times that paid 7% Another way of looking at is might be $50 was about the average income for a man for a month. Women? You don't want to know that number.

    I wonder what ancient coin you could buy for $100 in 1915?
     
  6. IdesOfMarch01

    IdesOfMarch01 Well-Known Member

    Here's another perspective on investments, albeit for a somewhat shorter time period.

    The compounded annual return on the S&P 500 (including reinvestment of dividends) since the start of 1928 (yes, including the entire Great Depression) is 1.0995 through the end of calendar 2021.

    If, instead of buying this coin for $100 in 1915, you had kept the $100 and invested it in the S&P 500 at the start of 1928, your $100 investment would be worth $745,335.78 today.

    No, that's not a typo.

    You could buy this coin today and still have over $565,000 in your bank account.

    My conclusion: Invest surplus money that you'll never need in the S&P 500, not coins. Buy coins you like as a hobby, not an investment.
     
  7. Ryan McVay

    Ryan McVay Well-Known Member

    Now preach that message to the fools in the recent auctions! And, maybe, just maybe prices might return to "normal".
     
  8. robinjojo

    robinjojo Well-Known Member

    Those $50 commemorative slugs have a lot of sex appeal, especially the octagonal Pan-Pac coin. There is a round flan that is valued lower, but I am still sure that one would have to sacrifice one's first born to to acquire it. These coins have a lovely classical Art Deco style.
     
  9. The Meat man

    The Meat man Well-Known Member

    You'd have to live a long time to be able to do that. :p

    Seriously though, that is great advice and I wish that more people would understand and think about the power of long-term investing like that. The greatest asset young people have is time, by far.
     
  10. Al Kowsky

    Al Kowsky Well-Known Member

    You're right, the coin is an excellent example of early Art Deco. Robert Aitken was strongly influenced by ancient Greek coinage as this coin proves :D. I like his use of dolphins too, giving the coin a sense of movement.
     
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  11. robinjojo

    robinjojo Well-Known Member

    Yes! The dolphins also are a reference back to the coinage of Syracuse, I think.

    It is a very classy and astronomically expensive coin.
     
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