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anyone collect the China Panda's?
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<p>[QUOTE="gxseries, post: 218262, member: 4373"]Give China another few more years and it will be like another Russian market - prices will rocket although I will have to guess that common panda coins will raise quite slowly compared to other ridiciously low mintage coins. Perhaps the unusual panda coins, i.e. not just plain precious metal bullion coins but coins such as 5oz, bimetal, kilo etc will remain pretty high. But please don't quote me on that. </p><p><br /></p><p>Like what see323 said, perhaps the Zodiac series will raise pretty fast since the current Chinese market doesn't have enough coins - Canada, Australia, Singapore, Hong Kong are all minting zodiac coins and a fair percentage go to China. Remember Chinese can be quite patriotic so perhaps one day, they will start looking for their own national coins instead of foreign.</p><p><br /></p><p>A few years ago, especially 10 years ago, the Russian economy pretty much fell to the lowest in history and coins coming out from that country were virtually priced worthless. 10 years later now in 2007, low mintage coins of what used to be hundreds have easily tripled. </p><p><br /></p><p>Perhaps one of the best example right now is the Chinese 1980 Olympics coins that was commemorated of the Winter Olympics if I am not mistaken and prices are starting to move gradually in particular due to the Beijing Olympics occuring next year. </p><p><br /></p><p>But again, but if you look carefully at the old Chinese coins in particular the period of 1850s-1900s where China was virtually torn apart by various nations, genuine silver and gold coins are starting to head towards prices that was never heard before. This is particually beacause of a fair amount of rich Chinese enterpreurs are starting pop up as well as finding genuine coins from the mass amount of counterfeits is starting to be quite a challenge. </p><p><br /></p><p>Now as for such, this is one example that I have:</p><p><br /></p><p><img src="http://www.omnicoin.com/coins/906672.jpg" class="bbCodeImage wysiwygImage" alt="" unselectable="on" /></p><p><br /></p><p>Comes with the original box and some paper documentation - around 10USD including shipping. That's simply because silver was just at 7usd ish. I wouldn't complain <img src="styles/default/xenforo/clear.png" class="mceSmilieSprite mceSmilie1" alt=":)" unselectable="on" unselectable="on" />[/QUOTE]</p><p><br /></p>
[QUOTE="gxseries, post: 218262, member: 4373"]Give China another few more years and it will be like another Russian market - prices will rocket although I will have to guess that common panda coins will raise quite slowly compared to other ridiciously low mintage coins. Perhaps the unusual panda coins, i.e. not just plain precious metal bullion coins but coins such as 5oz, bimetal, kilo etc will remain pretty high. But please don't quote me on that. Like what see323 said, perhaps the Zodiac series will raise pretty fast since the current Chinese market doesn't have enough coins - Canada, Australia, Singapore, Hong Kong are all minting zodiac coins and a fair percentage go to China. Remember Chinese can be quite patriotic so perhaps one day, they will start looking for their own national coins instead of foreign. A few years ago, especially 10 years ago, the Russian economy pretty much fell to the lowest in history and coins coming out from that country were virtually priced worthless. 10 years later now in 2007, low mintage coins of what used to be hundreds have easily tripled. Perhaps one of the best example right now is the Chinese 1980 Olympics coins that was commemorated of the Winter Olympics if I am not mistaken and prices are starting to move gradually in particular due to the Beijing Olympics occuring next year. But again, but if you look carefully at the old Chinese coins in particular the period of 1850s-1900s where China was virtually torn apart by various nations, genuine silver and gold coins are starting to head towards prices that was never heard before. This is particually beacause of a fair amount of rich Chinese enterpreurs are starting pop up as well as finding genuine coins from the mass amount of counterfeits is starting to be quite a challenge. Now as for such, this is one example that I have: [img]http://www.omnicoin.com/coins/906672.jpg[/img] Comes with the original box and some paper documentation - around 10USD including shipping. That's simply because silver was just at 7usd ish. I wouldn't complain :)[/QUOTE]
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anyone collect the China Panda's?
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