Prices rising 10% a week??
MoneyLA
Posts: 1,825 ✭
Ive been chatting with a few dealers over the past week, and more than a couple of them are talking about the red hot market and remind me of the time when prices were rising ten-percent a week, and suggest we might be about to re-enter that type of super-hot market. by the way, these weren't "sellers" but dealers interested in "buying." anyone else got the feeling? cheers, alan mendelson
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Sure wish a Crystal Ball was present and correct.
Ken
it eventually came down even faster. Yes, it does seem that a rapidly increasing
amount of money is starting to chase a rapidly dwindling supply of coins. The
big beneficiaries will be coins that have never been fully appreciated before.
These range from pop top Morgans which were generally only worth 8X or 10X
the gem price in 1989, to MS-60 1983-P quarters. Will this time be different?
Ask me again in a couple years. Certainly high grade coins don't have to be the
most important thing to large numbers of people, but they certainly are now.
This has been growing and growing and it is these types of coins that are get-
ting the attention now. While few are probably dramatically overpriced now,
exercise extreme care if you are considering investing in these markets. The
hobby has a way of chewing up investors and spitting them out and after a cou-
ple years of a rapidly rising market the risk could become extreme. I'd caution
everyone to try to keep a collector's perspective and to avoid mere speculation
wheter that's in Morgan dollars or clad quarters.
last sentence tweeked
Check out a Vanguard Roth IRA.
bruce scher
At the same time, despite higher pops in earlier top-pop proof Jefferson coins (I'm talking about 30's and 40's issues), the prices seem to be holding up. The bids for some of these that are up for auction in Long Beach are encouraging -- the prices are holding for former pop 2-4 coins that are now pop 6-10 coins. . . .
William S. Burroughs, Cities of the Red Night
Go BIG or GO HOME. ©Bill
At that rate a $100 coin will be worth $2 million in two years. I'd jump off at about $1 million if I were you -- don't accept any trade-ins, either.
I wish it wasn't true, but I truly think it is. If one were to track the grade distribution of proof Jeffs made during 2000 through 2002, compared with the ones made this year, you'd see a bell curve that is noticeably skewed to the right for the later period, IMHO (I don't have the time to actually do this). These are not "better" coins that came out of a trove. . . .
William S. Burroughs, Cities of the Red Night
Check out a Vanguard Roth IRA.
<< <i>BNE: At the same time, despite higher pops in earlier top-pop proof Jefferson coins (I'm talking about 30's and 40's issues), the prices seem to be holding up. The bids for some of these that are up for auction in Long Beach are encouraging -- the prices are holding for former pop 2-4 coins that are now pop 6-10 coins. . . . >>
I must say I am surprised at how well the pop top proof Jeffersons are "holding": 1938 PR68 - $3,335; 1941 PR68 - $4715; 1942T1 PR68 - $4140; 1942T1 PR68 - $3565 (all prices including fees). I found these astounding prices They certainly are compatible with the notion that prices are rising very quickly
Richard
MS Buffalo
MS 1951
When I report and comment on the runaway housing market in Southern California -- and especially when I speak to groups about the subject -- I often ask this question:
"Can you today afford to buy the house you are now living in at the price you would ask if you were to sell it today?"
Usually the answer from nearly all or all in the room is "no."
In Southern California home price growth has exceeded income growth by such a large extent that consumers have maxed out their ability to purchase a new home. Even those selling one home to buy another are facing a crunch where the home price inflation has exceeded their income inflation (which is probably under 3-percent).
Bottom line: the home price inflation ends, and if conditions force a sale then deflation is the result. A tough job market can trigger that deflation.
Now to coins: how far are we from the same fate? At what point does the coin price inflation outreach the ability of collectors to buy and when does the coin price deflation start its victious cycle of sellers who are forced to sell for economic reasons prompt others to sell out of fear of falling values?
Sorry, but I had to let the "economist" inside me vent.
cheers, alan mendelson
www.AlanBestBuys.com
www.VegasBestBuys.com
Obviously there is little danger of anything advancing 10% weekly for two years. In '89
when the prices were advancing so rapidly it was really more that the advances would
approach these rates and even then it wouldn't include all the Morgans each week, there
was some cycling in and out of the limelight. This went on about a year and a half or so
at that time and did require some time to build to so torrid a market.
While the Morgans achieved unsustainable levels (perhaps like the S California housing mar-
ket), they did so by soaking up much of the available capital in the coin market. The modern
market is still very small. It is a tiny fraction of the size of the market for the older coins. A
rare, scarce, or common modern brings a fraction of the price of what a comparable classic
would bring. While I would not necessarily predict, and certainly wouldn't encourage specu-
lation, there does seem a significant chance that these disparities will diminish greatly and
will require a couple of years for the process. During this time I would expect some healthy
gains in the prices of the older coins. There are substantial amounts of new money flowing
into the market and I'm guessing that this will increase. There will be many hot series and hot
coins, but when this is over it will eventually include most all coins and likely exonumia as well.
No one should be in a hurry since the entire process will likely take about twenty years.