Should I buy it?

Discussion in 'Bullion Investing' started by Detecto92, Aug 22, 2013.

  1. Detecto92

    Detecto92 Well-Known Member

    Have a chance to buy a 2012 PF70UC 1 pound silver britannia. The price is "right".

    Thing is, this coin only had a mintage of 2,500, and since it's a PF70, that's even better.

    Now putting the collecting aspect aside, I wonder if in say...20 years, the price of this piece will go up due to low mintage and high grade.
     
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  3. scottishmoney

    scottishmoney Buh bye

    Who says it is PF-70? Remember the most important thing is not what someone in a musty and windowless Floridian office thinks of a coin - but what YOU think of it.
     
  4. Detecto92

    Detecto92 Well-Known Member

    I should've said...it's in NGC plastic.
     
  5. STACKERDENNIS

    STACKERDENNIS Keep Stacking!

    well if the price is right snag it up!
     
  6. What is the price?
     
  7. scottishmoney

    scottishmoney Buh bye

    Buy it if it looks right, don't buy based on what NGC says it is. Buy the coin, not the plasticized opinion of a caged hermit in a windowless office.
     
  8. NorthKorea

    NorthKorea Dealer Member is a made up title...

    Mainly this. It's a half ounce bullion proof piece. They *should* grade PF69 or PF70, with the occasional PF68 here or there.
     
  9. sonlarson

    sonlarson World Silver Collector

    Unless I am missing something, the silver Britannias are 2 Pounds, not 1 and 1 ounce silver not 1/2. The 2012 is a repeat design that I passed on. I believe the mintage for the 2012 Proof is 2450. The silver proofs are a good investment if you get it at the right price. The quality control at the Royal Mint has been having some issues lately and a certified PF70 might be a sleeper. I however, prefer the uncirculated versions.
     
  10. scottishmoney

    scottishmoney Buh bye

    The 2007 is the best design IMHO.
     
  11. sonlarson

    sonlarson World Silver Collector



    This one?

    2007britanniasilveruncrev400 (2).jpg
     
  12. treehugger

    treehugger Well-Known Member

    That is nice and all, but the Chariot is the best design.

    [​IMG]
     
  13. sonlarson

    sonlarson World Silver Collector

    I'll see your 10 year old design
    1999britt.jpg

    And raise you a 2010

    2010britt.jpg
     
  14. scottishmoney

    scottishmoney Buh bye

  15. rickmp

    rickmp Frequently flatulent.

    I don't know. What if it comes and you're happy with it?
     
    Jwt708 likes this.
  16. medoraman

    medoraman Supporter! Supporter

    Pretty nice designs. Too bad they have to design coins one sided. I bet the brits could do some nice work if allowed to use boh sides of the coin.
     
  17. longnine009

    longnine009 Darwin has to eat too. Supporter

    What do suppose the odds are that it
    Won't deteriorate in the slightest over
    20 years? Keeping in mind that slight
    is all that is standing between PR70
    and big yawn PR69. And of course
    we're assuming that chemicals and
    or methods used in it's production
    have not already preordained it
    to haze.

    What about a toned EF45? What are
    the odds that slight detetioration will
    even be noticable?
     
  18. scottishmoney

    scottishmoney Buh bye


    I wonder what coins in slabs are going to look like in 20+ years, heck I have seen examples of coins that rotted in slabs. Slabs are made of plastic. Which the TPG's claim is inert. But plastic is made from polystyrene - we all know the effects of polyvinyl chloride - but what about the long term effects of polystyrene?
     
  19. longnine009

    longnine009 Darwin has to eat too. Supporter

    Scottishmoney

    I have a MS64 Walker in a PCGS rattler
    that's over 20 years old. It looks
    like it held up okay. But I still like
    Lucite. Everything else just seems
    feeble compared to it.
     
  20. medoraman

    medoraman Supporter! Supporter

    If someone really wants "long term" coin storage, the only items I believe that have proven themselves are clay and glass vessels. I read once that a glass jar with a glass lid was found buried containing as struck coins about 700 years old. No toning or anything. Of course, clay jars are found all of the time buried with ancient coins inside, but since it was not sealed the coins tone.
     
  21. longnine009

    longnine009 Darwin has to eat too. Supporter

    I remember a tongue in cheek New
    Year's predictions in one of the publications
    where it predicted TPG's, would no
    longer return slabbed coins but would store
    them in abandoned ICBM silos and
    just issue a certificate. Thereby going
    full circle back to beginning.
     
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