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<p>[QUOTE="Juan Blanco, post: 1580948, member: 41665"]medoraman-</p><p>On average, do Silver or Gold coins cost more than nickel and copper? Of course they do! </p><p><i>PMs do support the multiples </i>some gold & silver coins realize, otherwise most US PM coin prices would sag to base-metal levels (ratios.) </p><p>That's why price averages (not the extremes) for US Gold/Silver coinage held up better than copper/bronze/etc. Is that not true for ancients, too?</p><p><br /></p><p>This isn't about scrap value, it's about the mystique of of PMs. Gold's worth more, hon. Just accept that, it's reality. (I didn't make these rules, btw.) </p><p>I'd be (only abit) wary of US Gold numismatics because an aging demographic of American collectors will - by necessity or death - be liquidating coin stocks en masse circa 2020-35. </p><p>But other US (non-PM) coins will probably crash harder. Globally, demand will be stronger for non-US coins (I predict.) </p><p><br /></p><p>Is there an early 20th C. coin-price chart for rare dates, 1903-1937? I wonder how those did against PMs & inflation, Boom through another Depression.[/QUOTE]</p><p><br /></p>
[QUOTE="Juan Blanco, post: 1580948, member: 41665"]medoraman- On average, do Silver or Gold coins cost more than nickel and copper? Of course they do! [I]PMs do support the multiples [/I]some gold & silver coins realize, otherwise most US PM coin prices would sag to base-metal levels (ratios.) That's why price averages (not the extremes) for US Gold/Silver coinage held up better than copper/bronze/etc. Is that not true for ancients, too? This isn't about scrap value, it's about the mystique of of PMs. Gold's worth more, hon. Just accept that, it's reality. (I didn't make these rules, btw.) I'd be (only abit) wary of US Gold numismatics because an aging demographic of American collectors will - by necessity or death - be liquidating coin stocks en masse circa 2020-35. But other US (non-PM) coins will probably crash harder. Globally, demand will be stronger for non-US coins (I predict.) Is there an early 20th C. coin-price chart for rare dates, 1903-1937? I wonder how those did against PMs & inflation, Boom through another Depression.[/QUOTE]
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