When my 4 year old antagonizes my 5 year old, I always advise her to simply ignore him and he'll lose interest.
You realize you're on a message board, right? EVERYONE is here to toss their opinions around. Besides - who cares? he's just an anonymous...
Price declines don't typically happen in a straight line downward. There are going to be bounces here and there, even if they are just dead cat...
I've said it a million times, but it bears repeating - economic doomsday scenarios destroy PM value in the same way as paper currency. PM in the...
I fixed that for you. :) Bear in mind that there were more than 600 million Morgan dollars produced, and we know for sure that approximately half...
Without handling it, I can't be certain if it's real or fake. But I am certain that I wouldn't have bought it. There are still far too many...
The reverse is easily 64 or better. The noise on the cheek seems a bit distracting for a 64 on the obverse, but overall, 64 is a fair grade.
I would be shocked if any coins were covered under flood insurance or otherwise. Coins, guns and jewelry almost always require a special rider,...
I overlooked that detail. My bad.
You're putting context to the quote that wasn't there - at least not in the article.
Just to be clear about my meaning, lead puts food on the table. A well placed shot with a .22 rifle will knock down virtually anything in North...
I think the take away lesson here is that there's nothing wrong with holding onto the copper pennies that you receive in change, but that you...
Perhaps, but I can easily buy a common date double eagle these days for $1500 to $1600. I can't imagine a "sunken treasure" slab is going to...
Interesting article, but this is complete BS: U.S. $20 Double Eagle coins fetch an average of $5,000 from collectors, Odyssey's chief operating...
It has as much to do with the price of them metal as it does the grade of the coin. higher grade coins hold their collector value more than lower...
Based on the chart, I don't see it hitting $23 on its next bounce. The peaks are getting smaller, not larger.
The fact that the committee considered - and rejected - approximate 40 designs that you don't particularly like either is problematic...why?
Yes, the ASE definitely falls under the same law. 25 years has passed and it is eligible for a new design. It only makes sense to at least explore...
this has been discussed at length in the U.S. Coins forum: http://www.cointalk.com/threads/ase-reverse-redesign.245318/ This isn't a change...
You understand, of course, that the United States has a clearly articulated policy aimed at devaluing the dollar (ie, inflation). It is the goal...
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