US Mint regrets

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by Eric Babula, Feb 10, 2026 at 9:29 PM.

  1. ksmooter61

    ksmooter61 Not in Kansas anymore

    I am with Greenie on this - I buy for what I want to have and enjoy, not considering them as any kind of investment. Investing in coins and bullion is foolish over the long term; stocks do way better.
     
    Eric Babula likes this.
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  3. Eric Babula

    Eric Babula Well-Known Member

    Unless you bought silver at $6/oz in 2005, and sold it for $115/oz in Jan 2026. LOL!

    But, I agree with you that you should buy what you want for your collecting enjoyment, and not solely think of them as investments.
     
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  4. Mammothtooth

    Mammothtooth Stand up Philosopher, Vodka Taster

    I do not regret any coin sets from the mint. They were and are nice to look at and if they have any silver well, that’s a bonus.
     
    Eric Babula likes this.
  5. ksmooter61

    ksmooter61 Not in Kansas anymore

    Very true. But, if in 2000 you invested $5 in these stocks you would now have:
    Monster = $3,127
    Netflix = $1,158
    Tractor Supply = $513
    Intuitive = $462
    ANSYS = $397
    Apple = $375
    IDEXX = $346
    Mastercard = $318
    Ross = $305

    However most common stocks are more around $40 - $80 so it's always a gamble.
     
    Eric Babula likes this.
  6. ZoidMeister

    ZoidMeister Hamlet Squire of Tomfoolery . . . . . Supporter

    Send them to the QuarterMaster. He'll put them to good use.

    Z
     
  7. geekpryde

    geekpryde Husband and Father Moderator

    I think the best thing you can do with these sort of low value bulk coins from the US Mint, assuming they no longer hold any interest to you, is to give them to a young person. Even if that person has never shown any interest in coin collecting, I would still think you could sort of scatter these low-value coins to all the young people that you know, and if one or two of them ever becomes a future collector, it would all have been worth it.

    Think neighborhood children, grandchildren, nieces, nephews, kids from your local church or some sort of local organization like Cub scouts or boy scouts.

    In my opinion, it's better than getting pennies on the dollar by trying to sell them to a coin dealer that is more than likely already inundated with this sort of material.
     
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  8. Vess1

    Vess1 CT SP VIP Supporter

    Meh, over all those years if that's all it cost you who cares? Either enjoy them or if you're worried about it, sell them for what you can get and cut your losses. I stuck to buying the silver proof sets on the after market. Just bought the 1999 set last year for under $60, full set.

    Can't say I have any regrets over mint purchases. Anything that was flawed I sent back. Looking back at my orders over the years I'm up substantially. Depends on what products you bought. The opportunity has been there for the past 10+ years.
    With the new pricing, value wise, good opportunities may be gone for a while unless we experience hyper inflation going forward. Still going to get a few things. Gold is too far out of sight now with their premiums. Last I saw they had pulled it all.
    Sometimes it pays to wait for the after market. Other things, getting from the mint is the only chance to get it halfway affordably. The V75 ASE and AGE, nobody was waiting for the aftermarket unless they were selling. I tried to get the ASE for 45 minutes and couldn't get through before they were sold out.
     
    Eric Babula likes this.
  9. Clawcoins

    Clawcoins Damaging Coins Daily

    I tried to get those too for maybe 15 minutes and gave up.
    if I recall, I think the website keeps you in hold until it can handle your traffic .. then shows stupid something like "Remind me" when it's sold out.
     
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