Nothing amazing but did end up with lots of pure nickel coins (mostly canadian 5 cents and Dutch) and canadian small cents (ranging 1920-2000s)....
A decent mix of loose world coins (and a bunch of tokens): ~33lbs for $200 [ATTACH]
To quote The Digital Underground: Dowatyoulike!
You are contractually required to buy it.
Bread and circuses. Amiright? ;)
Well….that’s an opinion one can have.
I kind of did this accidently. As a teen in the mid-90s I built an extensive collection of common 20th cent US silver coins, then decided to sell...
Yep. I'm just buying 'common' world junk silver right now and getting it for spot or a small premium. It's mostly just for fun and variety, but...
Agreed.
grade?
I think the current middle-aged generation (35-55) are seeing right through the marketing smoke screen to the irrationality and 'killing' the long...
And diamonds.
Alternatively, the irrational sticks around long enough to become the accepted market standard.
dittos.
The smart ones do or should. Best way to keep people coming back.
Yeah...methinks CNN doesn't know how currency (coin and paper) works.
65 (not FS) I bet it's better in hand, regardless.
You’ve nicely outlined my belief on this subject too. It’s all demand driven not supply.
Nice. I like to grab these attractive, but baffling ignored mint issues after market. I've had similar nice purchases buying the 1990s...
But my own opinion is that it’s all demand driven. The actual mintage for the last decade ranges about 20 mil to 40 mil each year. That’s a lot...
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