Foreign buyers / dealers / investors of U.S. coins - a forbidden topic?
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Who are the major players in Europe buying US coins? Why do US dealers deal with them vs. other US dealers? Do they try to "corner" parts of the US coin market only to dump their purchases later when prices are up?
I am trying to fill in a few gaps in a story I was told and need help. I asked one dealer about it in LB and his eyes got big like saucers and he claimed he knew nothing, right!
PM me if you wish to keep your comments private.
I am trying to fill in a few gaps in a story I was told and need help. I asked one dealer about it in LB and his eyes got big like saucers and he claimed he knew nothing, right!
PM me if you wish to keep your comments private.
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A few years ago when Russian president Vladimir Putin began cracking down on those "oligarchs" and "mafiya" who had transferred so much wealth out of the country, there was a big push to launder said monies in more untraceable ways. The prices of higher-end silver and gold rose rapidly in less than a year's time (with no concomittant change in the fundamentals of silver or gold). European dealers I know couldn't get enough higher-end precious-metal coinage to keep up and I made very few purchases there to add to my German collection. This had tapered off, but it is possible that wealthy Middle Easterners are doing the same in anticipation of what might follow a US victory over Iraq. It wouldn't be the first time there was such a major move of monies in such a situation.
Come on over ... to The Dark Side!
I am referring to dealers, people who move ALOT of inventory, buying then selling in the $1+million range. These are not "collectors" but coin business people, "investors".
Second, they are buying/selling both at the high end as investments, and the low end where alot of inventory can be purchased over time [i.e. Morgan $] then sold retail to newbies.
Maybe when some dealers return from the show they can shed light on this.
TRUTH
Where's Swimmer when you need him?
GSAGUY
Maybe you could layout more of the story you heard, DL?
Come on over ... to The Dark Side!
This has nothing to do with Heritage. The mechanics goes something like this: US dealer partners with a foreign investor* and set up a "fund" of say $2-5MM. They then go out and buy alot of say Proof Sets, Proof Gold, etc. I am not talking about the modern junk 99% of dealers have in their cases. I am talking about pre1933 proof gold and early date proof sets runs.
There's more to the story than I can reasonably divulge here, sorry. Someone else who does know will have to fill in the missing blanks that I am witholding and the ones I don't know.
*I don't believe you can invest in coins however in this instance the foreign partner is truly an investor who has zero interest in "collecting", this is strictly a business transaction designed to make a profit.
Not knowing all that you've heard, my suspicion is that you are catching wind of the Middle Eastern scenario I outlined above. They usually work through middlemen and have probably instructed them to transfer a lot of their soft assets into hard. Certainly, such expert middlemen would be aware that higher-end "old gold" has preserved or enhanced its value over the long run more than other areas; moreover, if you're moving a lot of money, it's less hassle to procure in less bulk. That would indeed tend to raise values, but whether they would drop sharply would have to depend on how fast they could unload.
Come on over ... to The Dark Side!