Your coin collection vs. your income
MrEureka
Posts: 24,252 ✭✭✭✭✭
Let's find out how devoted you really are...
Andy Lustig
Doggedly collecting coins of the Central American Republic.
Visit the Society of US Pattern Collectors at USPatterns.com.
Doggedly collecting coins of the Central American Republic.
Visit the Society of US Pattern Collectors at USPatterns.com.
0
Comments
<< <i>Define Income please. >>
Main Entry: in·come
Pronunciation: 'in-"k&m also 'in-k&m or 'i[ng]-k&m
Function: noun
1 : a coming in : ENTRANCE, INFLUX <fluctuations in the nutrient income of a body of water>
2 : a gain or recurrent benefit usually measured in money that derives from capital or labor; also : the amount of such gain received in a period of time <has an income of $20,000 a year>
<< <i>Thanks Jeremy. That was very helpful. >>
Define "worth", please.
Doggedly collecting coins of the Central American Republic.
Visit the Society of US Pattern Collectors at USPatterns.com.
Why not just ask what your yearly income is, and then how many year's of income is your collection worth??
When the questions are asked in dollars and cents, I feel the same way. But this is different, at least to me. In fact, the results of the poll have been a real eye opener for me.
Doggedly collecting coins of the Central American Republic.
Visit the Society of US Pattern Collectors at USPatterns.com.
<< <i>My collection is worth...
Define "worth", please. >>
Main Entry: 3worth
Function: noun
1 a : monetary value <farmhouse and lands of little worth> b : the equivalent of a specified amount or figure <a dollar's worth of gas>
2 : the value of something measured by its qualities or by the esteem in which it is held <a literary heritage of great worth>
3 a : moral or personal value <trying to teach human worth> b : MERIT, EXCELLENCE <a field in which we have proved our worth>
4 : WEALTH, RICHES
Edited for a shameless plug.
<< <i>Define Income please >>
Thats what you have left from your paycheck after the ducks get it. They deduck for this and they deduck for that. Then the wife deducks her cut!! The leftover is income; usually a very small amount.
<< <i>My collection divided by my income is infinity! I have no income... >>
No, that just wouldn't exist... when your income approaches 0, collection/income=infinity
The Ludlow Brilliant Collection (1938-64)
<< <i><< My collection divided by my income is infinity! I have no income... >>
No, that just wouldn't exist... when your income approaches 0, collection/income=infinity >>
Right unless you're on a projective line, then infinity is an actual point, but you lose the full group structure under multiplication.
<< <i>
<< <i><< My collection divided by my income is infinity! I have no income... >>
No, that just wouldn't exist... when your income approaches 0, collection/income=infinity >>
Right unless you're on a projective line, then infinity is an actual point, but you lose the full group structure under multiplication. >>
They didn't teach me that in BC Calc, and we haven't done calc yet in multivariable
I agree with this statement!
<< <i>They didn't teach me that in BC Calc, and we haven't done calc yet in multivariable >>
Wait until abstract algebra or algebraic geometry in college. I'm a math PhD student at UC Berkeley. You're right though. Your statement was more correct than my first statement!
Camelot
If Kerry gets elected then my gross vs. net will be down significantly.
Of course there's a correlation. It's just not all that simple. For example, if you put every dollar beyond food money into your collection, you might be obsessed by your hobby, which is almost the same as being "devoted" to it. On you other hand, you might just have no life, no imagination, and no better place to spend the money.
Or you might spend too much on food.
BTW, I spend too much money on coins AND on food.
Doggedly collecting coins of the Central American Republic.
Visit the Society of US Pattern Collectors at USPatterns.com.
BTW, I spend too much money on coins AND on food. >>
next time I'm in NYC Andy, we'll have to go over to Old Homestead and grab a 28 oz rib eye!
Rgrds
Tom
Coin's for sale/trade.
Tom Pilitowski
US Rare Coin Investments
800-624-1870
Or you might spend too much on food.
BTW, I spend too much money on coins AND on food. >>
That's food for thought.
Me, my collection is worth far less than a year's salary. I have been quite fortunate to get a huge boost in income with my new DC area consulting job.
Check out a Vanguard Roth IRA.
Coins seem pretty important to this crowd. I expected more people to have larger collections.
Doggedly collecting coins of the Central American Republic.
Visit the Society of US Pattern Collectors at USPatterns.com.
My answer: Less than 50% one year's salary.
<< <i>Eureka: In what way did the results of this poll suprise you?
Coins seem pretty important to this crowd. I expected more people to have larger collections. >>
Coins are important to me, but so is food, shelter and loading up on my 401(k) and our Roth IRAs. Those of us who have relatively modest incomes and modest net worth don't have all that much to spend on coins. I'm comfortable and admittedly way overpaid for what I do, but we're still, at best, upper middle class with the usual bills and obligations that go along with it. Plus, it's only been in the last couple of years, after fleeing the high-cost Silicon Valley area and finishing putting my wife through college, that we've had much discretionary income at all to play with.
It also depends on your age. If you're 55, you've had a lot more time to accumulate coins than if you're 25 or 35 (obviously).
My collection is worth about 2-3 months of my salary, but growing steadily. It will be quite a while before I have a year's salary worth of coins (though I expect to some day...maybe a decade or two from now). I just don't envision a day when my bills and living expenses are such a small fraction of my income that I can target huge percentages of it to coins.
K S
1. The majority of people who answered are truly collectors (not "investors" or "speculators").
2. The 8 who answered "more than 10" may be students or retirees.
3. People here have other financial obligations that preclude them from going overboard on their coins.
4. Some are focused on the semantics (define: semantics).
Any others?