Monthly investment programs
Longacre
Posts: 16,717 ✭✭✭
At some point in the past, there was a thread on the monthly investment programs that some firms offer. The general view was that board members looked with scorn upon these programs. Then I realized that although I don't view coins as "investments" per se, I consider stocks to be my investments. I own and contribute regularly to a bunch of mutual funds in which I have no active management role. What is the difference between a stock investment which I am sure other board members passively invest in, versus a monthly acquisition program that some people passively invest in, because they view coins as just another part of their investment portfolio? So are these monthly acquisition programs so bad for the "right" people? Comments?
Always took candy from strangers
Didn't wanna get me no trade
Never want to be like papa
Working for the boss every night and day
--"Happy", by the Rolling Stones (1972)
Didn't wanna get me no trade
Never want to be like papa
Working for the boss every night and day
--"Happy", by the Rolling Stones (1972)
0
Comments
Avoid the "coin" investment programs you see in magazines at all costs. The differences are significant.
First, investment advisers and broker-dealers in securities have to be licensced -- these professionals owe you a fiduciary duty and there are appropriateness tests governing security investments. Plus these professionals usually are backstopped by large organizations with hefty insurance policies.
Coin dealers? Call yourself a dealer and you are one. Zero protection for the collector/investor, other than some toothless coin organizations.
Second, shares of stock are fungible and are traded on nationally regulated exchanges -- there is a set market price for each share that you can instantly ascertain by looking at the publicly traded price. When you buy or sell your stock shares, you get the publicly traded price -- no games. Not so with coins. Coins are not fungible, there is no regulated public market, there are no market makers, etc. You don't know what kind of coin your getting until it arrives -- what do you do when you get coins that are POS's? You're screwed. And dealers charge collectors different prices than they do other dealers, so you are behind the 8-ball even before you make your first coin purchase. Again, these also are enormous differences.
When you invest in a companyt, it's an asset that hopefully is earning profits, perhaps paying a dividend, and hopefully has a rising share price. Coins? They sit there, earning nothing. Your only hope is that someone in the future will desire to pay more than you paid for your coin.
So I'd advise you, in the strongest possible terms, to avoid the coin "investment" programs -- they're a fraud. And I advise you to take my advice.
1. If you do not have the discipline to save up for big coin purchases, having your dealer automatically bill or debit you for smaller amounts might help you land the big coin.
2. If you would like to build a set/collection without doing any of the legwork. It does not seem to like much fun to me, but "different strokes for different folks".
Again, I would never be a participant in such a program, and it probably is not appropriate for any of the gunners on this message board.
Since the dealer is more or less assured of a sale to you from your monthly payments, which coins do you think he is going to send you: (A) Choice coins for which he could get premiums from discriminating buyers or (B) Run-of-the-mill or lesser coins grade coins that he’s looking to turnover?
If you answered (A), you are naïve. Investment programs are for chumps. The BEST way is to set aside a fixed amount of money for coins every month. Some months you might not buy anything. Other months when the RIGHT coin comes along, you can pounce on it. That’s what I’ve done for years.
that YOU select from what ever YOU decide is the best source and you pay
what YOU decide is the best price. I believe that the advice of a reputable dealer is
important and helpful, but YOU must be you must be in control of your collection.
In many cases, but not all, the coins selected in such a program are cast off items
purchased cheaply by the company and slipped to you as investments. Since you are
not expected to sell anything for a number of years, you will not notice that you are
being had for some time.
Camelot
<< <i>Avoid the "coin" investment programs you see in magazines at all costs. >>
Even the "limited edition" ones?
will usually be in series which are hard to sell or in hard to sell grades. These work well
for the dealers because they are a great place to dump coins and some dealers will pass
this on to the investor. Don't bet on it. While prices can be pretty low you should try to
sell some of these coins right off. Generally the costs of these coins are too high no matter
how cheap they are.
While coins are a great collectible and a dubious investment, if you must invest you are bet-
ter off doing it yourself. Find a dealer you can trust and buy coins you like or he recommends.
Sell some coins so you know what you're really paying for. Collectors usually do better than
investors so if you end up collecting you'll have more fun and probably more profit.
On the other hand, every coin is different and pricing is all over the place. Even if you specify the series, and grade you want, it's asking for trouble. Like Bill Jones said, you aren't going to get the best material.
It just doesn't make sense to say to a coin dealer "I'll take $300 worth of Morgans, please." No one would do that at a show, why do it through the mail?
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 agree with everyone, turning over $50 or $500 to a dealer every month and saying "pick them and send them to me" is placing a great amount of trust in the dealer. If it is someone from whom you have been buying coins for decades, yeah OK that might be a reasonable. Answering a solicitation or an advertisement and participating in such a program would be ill advised in my opinion. The only way I would do so was if I wanted to buy bullion gold at market; hard to get hurt that way but in that case just go to a local dealer and buy it yourself. The mark-up will probably be the same and you can always sell gold.
OK saying all that: I spent 1995-2001 on Wall Street and saw more shennanigans and simple crookedness than you could find in 3 lifetimes of dealing with coin dealers. Those folks are so far removed from the individaul share holders that they just consider the entirety of the shareholding public to be a bottomless well of money so they all can retire at 26 years old after having traded for 4 or 5 years. Sounds cynical but that is what I experienced. And yes, I was a registered broker but never did any retail work.
I have a monthly coin investing program. I have convinced my wife that it is sound financial planning for me to spend a certain amount of money every month on Morgan dollars. I have the funds to indulge in my hobby and watch the value of my coins go up every year. She bought the concept so I get to play. Works for me.
Rick
Joe.
That is one of the points I make: if it is a trusted entitiy, I think it would be OK.
Rick
-YN Currently Collecting & Researching Colonial World Coins, Especially Spanish Coins, With a Great Interest in WWII Militaria.
My Ebay!
They are potentially beneficial for the person who does not have the time or ability to build a collection on his/her own. Many times it is the only way that the collector would have a shot at obtaining elusive pieces. They work best for the well-healed collector.
It is essential that the collector and seller understand fully what the collector wants. The seller is in effect is acting as an agent for the collector for which he is payed a fee. Many high-end collections have been build this way.
The $100 a month "investment programs" and their ilk, as others have said, are anything but investment programs for the collector. You would likely be far better off using the money to stuff your pillow.
If you're essentially a nobody to a large, nameless and faceless dealer or if you have a dealer who isn't well noted for their integrity, it's a way to get mediocre coins you couldn't otherwise afford at one time.
I'd be wary of someone who calls it an "investment" plan, though. "Installment" plan would be a better choice of words.