Premium on common double eagles

Discussion in 'Bullion Investing' started by NLL, Oct 18, 2023.

  1. GoldFinger1969

    GoldFinger1969 Supporter! Supporter

    Premiums percentage-wise will RISE as gold falls...they will FALL as gold RISES.

    We know this in real-time because all those MS-65 common Saints that sold for 20-25% premiums a few years ago are basically selling for bullion or melt today.

    Look at the 2 MS-63 coins I bought at FUN 2026, an 1898-S Libety Head CAC and an 1923 Saint CAC. Both purchased basically for spot bullion. A few years ago they would have cost me 10-15% premiums, maybe more.

    MS65 Saint Pricing 1997-2020.jpg
     
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  3. jolumoga

    jolumoga Active Member

    I have looked at limited data, so perhaps it's best that I shut my trap (lesson in humility). I'm going by Indian Head gold coins on eBay. I noticed that as the gold price spiked, the sellers were not very quick to adjust the premiums along with the gold price, so there were deals I took advantage of for a short time that disappeared. So in this case premiums appear to have risen in total amount and percentage amount for this narrow market on eBay. Now, the prices appear to have slightly ticked up, adjusting for the gold price rising, as well as perhaps gauging collector demand. I don't want to make this academic, but perhaps retail - who hold pre-1933 gold - sold while the market was hot initially, and maybe that selling has abated.
     
    GoldFinger1969 likes this.
  4. GoldFinger1969

    GoldFinger1969 Supporter! Supporter

    Nah, I like the give and take. Don't take it too seriously. :D
    Good observations....with Eagles, you are talking about sub-1 ounce fractionals and the premiums there might be "stickier" because the total price is still more affordable than a falling premium on a Double Eagle.

    Everything I have read says that premiums on pre-1933 bullion gold (NOT numismatics) should be less than the equivalent counterpart moderns because liquidity and demand are LESS for pre-1933.

    So if you just want gold on the cheap...won't need to sell it....and like the numismatic/historical angle....pre-1933 is the place to shop !
    Plausible.....keep in mind that elasticities are lower for fractional ounce coins because they are more affordable with a 1-oz now costing $5,000 plus.

    If a Half-Eagle should sell for a 10% premium to gold ($1,250 + 10%), even if the seller asks 20% it's more affordable than a Double Eagle and probably even an Eagle. Same formula for modern 1-ouncers vs. modern fractionals. I once paid a 40% premium on a 1/20th ounce Panda !!! :D

    Same math might work with Eagles vs. Double Eagles (or any other 1-ounce modern gold coins).
     
    Last edited: Mar 15, 2026 at 8:14 PM
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