silver

Discussion in 'Bullion Investing' started by jlogan, Mar 4, 2014.

?

best deal?

  1. 10 ASE's

    32.4%
  2. 10 maple leaves

    5.4%
  3. 2 ATB pucks

    24.3%
  4. 13 cull silver dollars

    0 vote(s)
    0.0%
  5. 27 90% halves

    5.4%
  6. 68 40% halves

    0 vote(s)
    0.0%
  7. 55 90% quarters

    8.1%
  8. 138 90% dimes

    10.8%
  9. other...?

    13.5%
  1. jlogan

    jlogan Well-Known Member

    i think i'm going with halves, i can get 1964 kennedys for 14x face. i looked into silver dollars, well-circulated 1921 Morgan, 1922 and 1923 are $20 each, dimes and quarters are both 14.5x face, and i think 90% is more interesting than bullion. thanks for all the opinions
     
    Briguy likes this.
  2. Avatar

    Guest User Guest



    to hide this ad.
  3. goldmember

    goldmember Junior Member

    I was just going to say almost any of the options except the 40% halves. They are a little harder to sell and you'll almost always take a big hit when selling them, but it's harder to get that discount when buying them. I like the Maples, pucks, or the 90% myself, but then again I'm not picky when it comes to silver!
     
  4. Briguy

    Briguy Collector 4 Life

    Pretty sure even heavily worn morgans still have a base price that's currently above silver. I talked to a dealer last week and he has them for $27 each... said that was the minimum he would take for one. Common dates of course. ;)
     
  5. Briguy

    Briguy Collector 4 Life

    I do buy a little of both... but I agree the 90% is great to have. I enjoy knowing that I own a piece of history.
     
  6. wishingman42

    wishingman42 Member

    I like the pucks myself!
     
  7. Silveraholic

    Silveraholic Member

    ASE's or pucks for me. 90% a distant third.
     
  8. CamaroDMD

    CamaroDMD [Insert Clever Title]

    I disagree with this. If I was simply looking to stack silver...nothing more, all that matters is the silver AND the price was the same (per ounce of silver) I would prefer to go with the purest form. From my experience, the purer the metal the more liquid it is. I know 90% is very easy to move...but nothing is easier that .999 fine.

    That said, I "like" the classic 90% coinage better...but from a bullion only standpoint, the purer the better.
     
    MorganDollarTJ likes this.
  9. ROLLJUNKIE

    ROLLJUNKIE Active Member

    Fair enough for the options given. I just don't understand how anyone could call a +15% premium a selection based on bullion investing. If someone is hedging their bets on low mintage, and designs they like, that isn't bullion investing, that's coin collecting my friend.
     
  10. randrace

    randrace Member

    ASE's are my pick. Just bought 10 this week from APMEX on Ebay for $249 shipped!
     
  11. Agreed, but maybe in some cases it is more bullion collecting (ASEs, pucks) than coin collecting (Morgan dollars, other 90%). The premiums were not great across all the options listed by the OP. That "other" category could have included generic rounds or maybe a generic 10 oz bar that sells very close to spot. You raise and interest point about mintage and designs though. I always try to look for the best deals, although I do tend to purchase items that are aesthetically pleasing to me, such as ASEs and Libertads. The good news is that these aesthetically pleasing items typically sell for a premium based on higher demand, so when I have sold I always recoup that premium above spot. I think the bullion pucks have promise to increase in value, not only based on bullion value, but based on lower mintage and design. For example, I bought the Hawaii 5 oz puck for about 10% above spot in 2012. Because it is the lowest mintage so far and people like the cool design, I can easily make a 3-4 times profit if I sell it now. I was in a local bullion/coin shop a while back, and the guy told me that the best way to buy silver was at or below spot. I asked him if he had anything like that, he reached under the desk and pulled out a box of unrecognizable metallic objects (cylinders, bearings, disks etc.) that he said were all marked .999 silver. It looked like scrap metal. He said that he would weigh as much and I would like and offer it to me at spot. I said no thanks...show me those aesthetically pleasing ASEs instead. :) TC
     
  12. jlogan

    jlogan Well-Known Member

    my problem with generic rounds and bars in the past is that they are a pain to re-sell, although i do not plan on flipping anything right now
     
  13. I agree with you and unloaded many of my generic rounds when silver peaked a few years ago. I kept some of it, like the Prospector rounds, in which I like the design. I like your idea of getting Kennedy halves. You may want to consider Franklins. All are 90%, unlike the Kennedy's with some clad, 90%, and 40%. You know the difference but someone buying from you may not especially if the dates wear off over time. TC
     
  14. Heater

    Heater Well-Known Member

     
  15. Heater

    Heater Well-Known Member

    Well that didn't go as I planned. Just wanted to reply without a quote.

    Just keep putting it back into CRH. YOU have fantastic luck with that....what is better then silver at face.

    Do like the SLV etf suggestion but not for the amount you are asking about.

    Have fun no matter what you decide.
     
  16. jlogan

    jlogan Well-Known Member

    i thought about franklins, but they cost $225 per roll at the LCS. walkers are $250, and barbers are $300.
     
  17. jlogan

    jlogan Well-Known Member

    i would if it were that simple :). lately i have had a harder time getting halves, and i dont have nearly as good of luck in dimes. i do keep $2k in CRH money set aside that i dont use for anything else though. actually, a good sized chunk of my silver stack is in 40% halves i found before silver rose above $40 in 2011, back when the bank down the street had halves all the time before everyone started searching. i dont know where they all came from, but there was ALWAYS silver in the rolls and i can literally count on one hand the number of post-1980 i got! (89-P, 89-D, 92-D, 01-D. i saved them because up to that point i had never found any that new!). unfortunately i was 8 -13 years old and until i was about 11 i could only afford to search $20 a week.
     
  18. wishingman42

    wishingman42 Member

    Would you say Johnson Matthey silver is generic silver?
     
  19. john1942sept

    john1942sept Member

    Overcoming the spred in silver bullion, especially small purchases is a problem.
     
    Hotpocket likes this.
  20. Mkman123

    Mkman123 Well-Known Member

    14x for silver halves.............you could make some money as their is a dealer on a forum who put a wanted ad paying 15.8-16x for silver halves......

    Get silver halves!
     
    jlogan likes this.
  21. brightspirit1

    brightspirit1 Member

    I like ASE's. Beautiful coins and great liquidity.
     
Draft saved Draft deleted

Share This Page