To paraphrase Winston Churchill, the US Fed is the worst national system, except for all the other [nations']……..
Still up pretty high though...in a historical view.
How to train your dog to find gold.
Sorry my brain was working correctly: When your cost of acquisition is so low and profit high....
At the risk of being pushy, the rainy day is now, in my opinion. When you're cost of acquisition is so high, you need to actualize it into cash....
It's the rational thing to do in these types of situations, especially with low purity silver coins. Take that free money and use it to buy nice...
If I was you, I'd sell it all, keep a bit extra over the initial face value cost for more CRH-ing and then plow the rest of the money back into my...
Agreed. I bought mine for about $12 a couple years ago.
Nice.
Actually, looking at the figure closely, I'd say hurdles. (track and field event) EDIT: From numista.com: Reverse Edmonton University Games logo...
Nice. I recently bought two of the proof sets these came from for like $11 each. Although these dollars are only 50% silver, they make nice...
That's a decent one. I'd likely buy it for the fun factor at 10-20% over silver value. I only have a couple 200+ year old coins in my collection.
nvm
Two additions to my world crown collection: [ATTACH]
Nice. The 43-D Jeff is the scarcest find - 15,294,000 mintage.
Now that you say it, I recall knowledge of that person. In this instance though, the name similarity is purely coincidental. I created this...
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As for my 'cull' or bargain bin finds of greater or lesser value: Two UNC 1950-D Jeffs for 50 cents each A clean XF 1934 Peace dollar in the $20...
Yea...great cherrypick. Even in high AU you've got an $800-$1000 coin. Major whoops on the dealer's part, but maybe they are essentially OK...
I also agree with MS-64.
Separate names with a comma.