Is hoarding foolish? What do you hoard?
epicrecipe
Posts: 44
I've read a couple of posts today where people discuss the long term financial mistake of hoarding coins. They point out that if you had invested the money at a modest return as you saved it, you'd have much more money today. Of course, they are technically right, but it smells a bit too academic. The reasoning is sound, but it's developed in hindsight. What simple investment vehicles can one contribute so little so rarely and get a 7-10% return.
There are benefits of hoarding coins on a small scale. Hoarding offers relatively quick tangible results. As one saves, they can appreciate how quickly saving adds up - an important lesson in learning how to build wealth. Once they become aware of their savings, they're more apt to decide to save where they previously would have spent unconsciously. It's empowering to have extra money relatively effortlessly especially when it yields something meaningful like a nice dinner with my wife once a month or an annual weekend retreat. Some people get the enjoyment of sifting through the coins. Others hedge on a boost in numismatic value. And a hoard is liquid.
I hoard pocket change and cash it in to pay a bill every few months or bankroll a poker game. I also hoard sacs and SBAs I get as change from machines at the post office that I'll probably deposit in my daughter's savings account. My mom gave me a small hoard of half dollars that piqued my interest in this hobby. Not sure what I'll do with it.
It's tough to balance these real benefits against the theoritical alternative. I'm not talking about massive hoards that border on being compulsive. Just small hoards from pocket change. Am I wrong?
What do you hoard, how big is it and what do you spend or plan to spend your hoard on?
There are benefits of hoarding coins on a small scale. Hoarding offers relatively quick tangible results. As one saves, they can appreciate how quickly saving adds up - an important lesson in learning how to build wealth. Once they become aware of their savings, they're more apt to decide to save where they previously would have spent unconsciously. It's empowering to have extra money relatively effortlessly especially when it yields something meaningful like a nice dinner with my wife once a month or an annual weekend retreat. Some people get the enjoyment of sifting through the coins. Others hedge on a boost in numismatic value. And a hoard is liquid.
I hoard pocket change and cash it in to pay a bill every few months or bankroll a poker game. I also hoard sacs and SBAs I get as change from machines at the post office that I'll probably deposit in my daughter's savings account. My mom gave me a small hoard of half dollars that piqued my interest in this hobby. Not sure what I'll do with it.
It's tough to balance these real benefits against the theoritical alternative. I'm not talking about massive hoards that border on being compulsive. Just small hoards from pocket change. Am I wrong?
What do you hoard, how big is it and what do you spend or plan to spend your hoard on?
Looking for hobo nickels
0
Comments
I save (hoard?) all my change and cash in about every 2 years. A few weeks ago, we cashed in and had about $550 in quarters dimes and nickels. So, we pulled a little extra cash and bought a Hitachi DVD movie camera.
Sure, we coulda put it in the bank, but it's just "fun money".
<< <i>What do you hoard? >>
Delaware state quarters.
<< <i>Is hoarding foolish? >>
In my case, probably.
Ask me no questions, I'll tell you no lies.
Ask me no questions, I'll tell you no lies.
Yes - that's what I was curious about. Cool camera!
the camera is fun and basically cost us 1/3 retail from saving pocket change.
Ask me no questions, I'll tell you no lies.
Ask me no questions, I'll tell you no lies.
I should add, I've only been saving them for about a year or so. I don't get them in change all that often so I don't see hoarding very many.
Ask me no questions, I'll tell you no lies.
copper cents,
1982 zincs,
pl zincolns,
1982 nickels,
better-condition-for-its-age stuff
anything that looks collectible.
i have a blast opening bank wrapped rolls of any denom and searching through em.
cheap way to get stuff but you are limited to whats out there in circulation.
rarely if ever any silver dimes or quarters
so its off to the coin store for the real juicy stuff
when finances allow
They are not worth diddly-squat. The same money invested elsewhere whuld have yielded a nice profit. To me, hoarding sucks!!
I'll take'em off your hands.
Heck, even Leroy Lenhart won't buy 'em, and he buys nearly everything!!
Kinda makes me sick every time I think about 'em. Outta sight, outta mind!!
If you end up with them again, I'll pay shipping if you wanna get rid of them
I suppose if it's the only way one can get theirself to save, it's better than not saving at all, though.
<< <i>Well, since I was one of those folks who brought up the financial angle, let me clarify. If you hoard because you enjoy doing it, that's one thing -- the financial implications are secondary. But if, like my late mother-in-law with her mostly XF-AU bicentennial quarters, or others with wheat cents and the like, someone puts them away because "they'll be worth something some day," and lots of other people are doing so too, then you're all but guaranteeing that they won't be worth much more than face value for a long, long time.
I suppose if it's the only way one can get theirself to save, it's better than not saving at all, though. >>
The perverse thing about human nature is that everyone tends put away about
the same thing because "it will be worth something someday". This of course as-
sures it's unlikely to be worth very much until long after they all give up. One should
not assume on the basis of this one experience that saving things which are current
can not provide a monetary profit in the future, but you would have to save those
things which others are not in order to have much of a chance.
While I'd hardly recommend saving things like current circulated coin in vast quantity
for possible appreciation it should be noted that many of these are almost impossible
to locate more than a few years old. Not only were people not saving new coin in the
late '70's they certainly weren't intentionally saving used coins. It is extremely uncom-
mon to find a roll or quantity of quarters that are over six years old. In fact for most of
the last several decades it's been almost impossible to find a roll that was more than 3
years old. While demand is small the supply is non-existent.
As was pointed out on another thread on this subject the results of this hoarding would
have been much different if the coins were being cherry picked from BU rolls and mint
sets. Even if they had been cherried from circulation for only the scarcest varieties and
the choicest coins the results would be very different.
Those who must hoard current items for profit would be well-advised to seek those which
are not being saved by other people.
<< <i>Not only were people not saving new coin in the late '70's they certainly weren't intentionally saving used coins. >>
I always found it fascinating that in the short span of about 15 years, things changed from massive hoarding of rolls and bags, to complete indifference. In the early 60's people hoarded new coins on an immense scale to where the Mint took the mintmarks away.
New collectors, please educate yourself before spending money on coins; there are people who believe that using numismatic knowledge to rip the naïve is what this hobby is all about.
I have been storing them in an artillery shell crate in my house. I have so many that I can't lift it. At last count I had over 4,000 quarters.
over 500 lincoln pennies.
over 100 linclon wheats.
over 200 nickels and 50 dimes.
over 30 dollars
over 10 half dollars
over 5 ikes.
2 morgans
25 or so liberty nickels.
I also love to go through rolls to find coins.
BST
MySlabbedCoins
I also fill up an an empty half-gallon bottle of Gatorade with quarters that I get in loose change or from bottle/can deposits. Once the Gatorade bottle is full, I roll them up and cash them in and use the money to buy coins.
Photos of the 2006 Boston Massacre
I used to hoard Bi-centennial Quarters. I had about $100 worth. Eventually I changed my desire to do it and cashed them in, putting
the money toward a new coin purchase.
Great transactions with oih82w8, JasonGaming, Moose1913.
one time I got 10000 quarters out of the vault and looked through them to see what the chances of finding a bicentenial was. I maneged to find about 20 or so.
Positive BST as a seller: Namvet69, Lordmarcovan, Bigjpst, Soldi, mustanggt, CoinHoader, moursund, SufinxHi, al410, JWP
I used to hoard bicentennial halves.
If you ever went to the bank and got 3 rolls of halves, only to find evey stinking one of 'em a circulated, jewel-lustered 1976 half.......
that was my hoard!
Silver Certificates
full rim V nickels, and Barber coins
With liberty Indian cents
Pocket watches
Proof coins pre 1936
tokens and medals
Www.killermarbles.com
Www.suncitycoin.com
<< <i>I'm pleased to say I've been very good at trying to keep my collection at one piece per dat/mint. I do have extras, but I try to liquidate them at the first opportunity. >>
I try to do the same thing. But I set aside any silver, wheats, silver halves/40%-ers, etc.
"Bongo hurtles along the rain soaked highway of life on underinflated bald retread tires."
~Wayne
I also hoard, just for the heck of it, circulated PA and DE SQ's, and older quarters (65-69) and older cents I receive in change.
On my way home today, I purchased 11.00 of BU coins (cents and nickels). I never plan to make a profit off these, but I do hope that my grandchild will enjoy them some day.
Art
Smitty, I have a bag of 100 Delaware quarters that I was thinking of putting on ebay.
-KHayse
I also have a weakness for 1795 Hertfordshire 4 Conder tokens. I have four of them, all proofs. My favorite one is one I picked up a few months back that came from Mathew Boulton's personal collection (Boulton was the manufacturer who coined them in 1795. His collection remained intact until late in 2002. I got it from the dealer who purchased most of the collection.) So I am only the second collector to own this 200+ year old piece and I got it (basicly) directly from the coiner himself.
jim
no, i'm serious!
K S
I also have maybe 20 rolls of circulated full date Buffalo nickels that I purchased years ago. Since then the price has increased from $4 a roll to around $20.
Beyond that my core collection is a well-organized group of nice collector coins with virtually no duplicates. As such I’d say that it is the antithesis of a hoard.
Rainbow Stars
I'm hearing that the silver Texas proof in going to sky rocket.
Any opinions on the silver 2004 proof sets, with the two nickels? Possible low mintage? Fast appreciation?
Dan
Still waiting for one to come my way.
Camelot
and they're cold.
I don't want nobody to shoot me in the foxhole."
Mary
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