Silverware & Silverplate

Discussion in 'Bullion Investing' started by GeorgeM, Oct 9, 2011.

  1. GeorgeM

    GeorgeM Well-Known Member

    At an antique mall the other day, I noticed that there were many different silver silverware sets priced at or below spot. I'm curious, are there any experts on the board who are buying up silverware as a bullion investment? If so, what do you look for to identify sterling vs. coin silver vs. plating?

    I bought a "quadruple plated" silver sugarbowl for $3. Not much of an investment, but I have a place in my pantry for it.
     
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  3. Collector1966

    Collector1966 Senior Member

    Usually, sterling ware will have STERLING stamped on it somewhere.

    Anything by Wm. Rogers is silver plate.
     
  4. Duke Kavanaugh

    Duke Kavanaugh The Big Coin Hunter

    As far as I know silver plate is not worth anything.
     
  5. medoraman

    medoraman Supporter! Supporter

    Yes, silverplate is basically worth copper value since its usually plated over copper. Sterling sells at a discount to the silver market, so buying it at spot would be a bad buy unless you just want a fancy silverwear set. I think the best price I have ever seen sterling sell for is about 90% of spot.
     
  6. fatima

    fatima Junior Member

    I'll add to what was stated above that real silverware will always have a stamp on it indicating that it is made from silver and not plate. Another caution. Pieces with large handles may be filled with plaster or cement called weighted silver. Other pieces that are subject to this kind of treatment are candle sticks, large handles on serving dishes, legs, bases, and so forth. If you are buying for bullion value, you need to take this into account not only because of the weight calculation but also because refiners often won't take this stuff until it's been cut up and filler removed.
     
  7. GeorgeM

    GeorgeM Well-Known Member

    I've never really understood that. Why does 92.5% silver sell for less than coin silver (90%)?
     
  8. Duke Kavanaugh

    Duke Kavanaugh The Big Coin Hunter

    I would think that it's the shape it's in.
    Being sterling it'd be harder to sell, harder to ship, harder to calculate that it is real verses a franklin or something that is much more liquid.
    Plus there is manufacturing costs to melt down the sterling in most cases too.
     
  9. medoraman

    medoraman Supporter! Supporter

    Because of the variability of what the other 7.5% is, and the fact that often it is metals very hard to extract from the silver. 90% US coin silver is easy to smelt, and a known item. Throw a bunch of sterling in a pot and there is no knowing what the other 7.5% may be.

    That is what I have heard.

    Chris
     
  10. Hamhawk

    Hamhawk Member

    Somebody once told me that sterling silver is worth less because it's harder to recover the silver. The problem is with sterling silver there are a variety of metals that can make up the 7.5% of non-silver, so it costs the refineries more to figure out what the compostion of the silver alloy is, then sort it, then melt it. Where as with the 90% "junk silver" coins, it's a fixed alloy. And they know anything coming out of the US mint has the same composition.
     
  11. Hamhawk

    Hamhawk Member

    HAHA I had to step away for a second. you beat me.
     
  12. pamckees

    pamckees Junior Member

    A few years ago I bought several sterling silver rounds. As I recall they were Canadian Olympic Commeratives. Would they be in the catagory of a Franklin or a sugar bowl ?
     
  13. medoraman

    medoraman Supporter! Supporter

    I would say better than normal sterling, but not as desirable as 90% silver would be. I would try to get junk coin multiple for it, but not be surprised if a little lower.
     
  14. fatima

    fatima Junior Member

    Indeed. Prior to 100% fiat money this is the only reason for government coinage of precious metals. It is a convenient assay of the metal at hand. You know the purity and weight. Hence it's easier to sell and ironically costs more than sterling whatever. Junk PMs, mainly in regard to silver and gold, really refers to the metal in any form that can't directly be used for monetary purposes. (bullion & coinage)
     
  15. chip

    chip Novice collector

    The British coinage up until after the war to end all peace, used .925 silver. I do not have a handy reference but would there not be some standard alloy used for sterling coins, as there was for United States coinage?
     
  16. medoraman

    medoraman Supporter! Supporter

    There is for British coinage, and some others, but usually when you refer to sterling you are talking about silverware and miscellaneous items. If sterling always referred to British coinage then I do not believe the discount for sterling would be as severe.
     
  17. davidh

    davidh soloist gnomic

    You also have to remove the stainless steel parts like knife blades which have the silver molded around them and can not be just pulled out.
     
  18. Collector1966

    Collector1966 Senior Member

    I think the discount for sterling coins is an American phenomenon, since the American market as a whole just doesn't seem to appreciate foreign silver coins, even the Panamanian silver coins that were minted on US silver coin planchets! Here in Japan, on the other hand, US 90% "junk" silver coins don't get any special treatment from dealers, and you can take a bag of mixed silver foreign coins to mini-smelters and they will calculate the fineness of the silver after they have melted the coins.
     
  19. statequarterguy

    statequarterguy Love Pucks

    I'd say the whole discount on sterling due to added cost to smelt is simply a ploy to pay less. Just as few coins are smelted today, so too, sterling is rarely smelted unless it's damaged. Anyone can sell silverware on eBay for melt or more and if you run a business specializing in silverware, you can get significantly more for a nice piece someone needs for their set.
     
  20. medoraman

    medoraman Supporter! Supporter

    Maybe the US smelters are just lazy then, or maybe they pay a premium for US junk that the Japanese dealers don't. I just don't know. I do know its not the dealers but the smelters themselves, since I have been at the smelters selling silver, and talking to them, and any sterling silverware or utensils they would discount. I was always told by them its harder to process, therefor their costs are higher. That is all I know.

    Chris
     
  21. Collector1966

    Collector1966 Senior Member

    Of course, there is a big difference between Sterling silver flatware and Sterling silver coins. As has been pointed out, flatware/tableware can contain materials that aren't even metal, so the total weight is not necessarily an accurate indication of the actual silver content. Coins, on the other hand, are assumed to be solid metal, so sterling silver coins should contain at least .925 silver by weight.
     
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