Mint requests return of coins to circulation

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by Mountain Man, Aug 30, 2022.

  1. Mountain Man

    Mountain Man Well-Known Member

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  3. charley

    charley Well-Known Member

    Damn collectors.....
     
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  4. tommyc03

    tommyc03 Senior Member

    Quite a few other countries are reporting the same.
     
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  5. Clawcoins

    Clawcoins Damaging Coins Daily

    those two articles are from July and August 2020.


    Mint Asks Public to Return Coins to Circulation

    Mint Advises Public: 'Get Coins Moving'
     
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  6. manny9655

    manny9655 Well-Known Member

    Gee, you don't think people are afraid of losing everything in the economic reset, do you? 401Ks have been taking a severe pounding. People are going to start hoarding money...
     
  7. MeowtheKitty

    MeowtheKitty Well-Known Member

    Well, they make five different quarters a year again. What do they expect hoarding Cats to do???
     
  8. lardan

    lardan Supporter! Supporter

     
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  9. buddy16cat

    buddy16cat Well-Known Member

    I don't collect modern coins so I guess I can dump my change bank in the coin machine.
     
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  10. Hommer

    Hommer Curator of Semi Precious Coinage

    If they are looking for those Zincolns, ashes to ashes, dust to dust..............
     
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  11. LakeEffect

    LakeEffect Average Circulated

    As I mentioned in another thread, I've got a few coffee cans full of rolled pennies (cents for you purists) along with a few rolls of dimes and nickels.

    My problem is getting them out of my closet. You know how much a coffee can of pennies (cents, whatever) weighs?
     
  12. -jeffB

    -jeffB Greshams LEO Supporter

    If you're hoarding fiat, you're doing it wrong. If you're hoarding fiat change, you're doing it doubly wrong.

    Clad coinage has a "melt value" of 20% or less of current face value. Nickels and copper cents hold metal worth more than the coin's face value, but (a) you can't make money by smelting them, and (b) that value is still quite low relative to their volume and weight.

    If you want to hoard cash (and there are some good arguments for doing just that, even in an inflationary economy), be sensible, and hoard it in the form of $100s. Or, at worst, $20s.
     
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  13. Good Cents

    Good Cents Well-Known Member

    Am curious - what are the arguments for hoarding fiat cash in an inflationary economy?
     
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  14. Dynoking

    Dynoking Well-Known Member

    +1. Jeff?
     
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  15. Hommer

    Hommer Curator of Semi Precious Coinage

    Because Ben Franklin said to.
     
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  16. cladking

    cladking Coin Collector

    The problem is usually caused by inflation. People simply allow their change jars to fill up more as the coins lose value.

    Of course closing the banks started the problem this time.
     
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  17. johnmilton

    johnmilton Well-Known Member

    The trouble is people are not using cash any more. I rarely use it. Yesterday I mailed a package at the post office. The week before that I bought a Coke at a gas station. That's been it for a few weeks.

    Everything is on credit or debit cards. Of course, if people have all of that change at home, who don't they turn them in at the bank or supper market coin machines? It's money that's just sitting there doing nothing.
     
  18. -jeffB

    -jeffB Greshams LEO Supporter

    Good call-out, guys.

    To clarify a little bit, by "hoard" I do NOT mean "keep most of your net wealth in cash", and by "inflationary" I do NOT mean "hyperinflationary". We haven't yet seen hyperinflation in the US, and I personally don't expect to see it without some major changes in world economics and politics. While the US is heading in several wrong directions, it's not a headlong plunge, again IMHO.

    Given that, wealth that you hold as cash has lost close to 10% of its purchasing power over the last year, and as long as inflation continues, it'll keep losing value. So, why keep it?

    For one thing, anywhere else you choose to put it might turn out to be in a bubble. Put it into Apple or houses, and it might double in the next couple of years, or it might lose more than half its current value. Cash declines predictably, and not abruptly. I see lots of talk about "The Great Reset", but I do NOT see a way for Them to just knock a zero or two off the dollar's value by legislation.

    Cash is also available, unlike a CD that has a fixed maturity date, or real estate that needs to be sold.

    Now, having said that, I've got most of my own wealth (such as it is) in equities and retirement funds and the house, and that's proven to be the right decision. My small hoard of PMs has done OK, and I still feel guilty about the cash that I don't have invested and earning returns -- but at the same time, I don't have to worry about freeing up funds if I need to replace an appliance or a car or a job or a doctor's yacht payment. (If I have to do all those at once, we're back to being uncomfortable.)
     
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  19. Dynoking

    Dynoking Well-Known Member

  20. Collecting Nut

    Collecting Nut Borderline Hoarder

    I save my coins up for a few months then roll them and take with me when I go to the bank. Then ai trade for paper money.
     
    Good Cents likes this.
  21. mlov43

    mlov43 주화 수집가

    ...the usual suspects...
     
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