If you bought them as they came out you got many of them for under $500 - it doesn't look to me like they are selling for much more than...
I'd guess that a graph showing the spouses would look a bit different. If someone bought spouses from the mint as they came out they would be way...
interesting question- if gold plummets will low mintage spouse coins hold a significant premium. I'd say that eventually they would.
I am defining things like the 2011 Silver Eagle set and the 2011 Army half as "sure things". In other words once I saw how low the mintage on the...
flipping seems to be the less risky approach. Look for the "sure thing" being sold by the mint, buy a bunch and sell them on ebay. very low risk...
that my friend is a risky bet
these are all just quotes from posts: -The obvious are the 1982 and 1983 coins -I don't know if you could call the 2009 nickel and dime "key"...
http://www.numismaticnews.net/article/mint-stats-silver-bullion-eagles-put-in-a-slow-week
thanks for chiming in on this- I always enjoy your posts and get a lot out of them. Let us know when you write a book- I will be the first in line...
mintage and it is just not a very impressive set in comparison
mostly the uncs
I'd say the 2011 has potential - just look at it- it is the finest product ever produced by the US mint
Does anyone consider modern keys a legit (forgive me for saying it) "investment"
Does anyone see anything interesting in the satins?
the gold unc Jackie R
that is pretty much it- but there are other factors like condition and demand
the 1972 type 2 Ike seems to be the biggie for me. For a while there the 1995 silver proofs were something and the 1999 proofs, but those seem to...
.....or just use your own definitions for those.. mostly just learning
The obvious are the 1982 and 1983 coins (since no mint set was produced). What other moderns would you call "keys"? If a Jefferson expert could...
you are in rare form this evening
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