Your prediction for the end of the bull coin market
nwcs
Posts: 13,386 ✭✭✭
I know that different series have different market cycles, but when do you expect that the end of this current upturn in the market will actually end (as all things do)?
0
Comments
<< <i>2 to 3 years, there is a hugh amount of dollars pouring into the coin market, the state quarter program had a giant effect on coin prices. most of the newbies will branch out into older coins. I see hugh increases in the art and antique world for the better stuff, same is true for the coin market. the better stuff always does best. >>
.
I agree,
2-3 years....the build up has been steady. I do not think FUN 05 will be a "white Hot" show but I also do not think it will be bad either.
TBT
<< <i> predict that FUN will be a bit of a disappointment and deflate the bull. >>
Do you mean the bourse or the auctions??
Many dealers are not expecting a great FUN because of the location change. I know quite a few collectors that usually attend but are skipping it this year.
IMO, the prices are starting to outpace the quality.
Tom
Coin's for sale/trade.
Tom Pilitowski
US Rare Coin Investments
800-624-1870
"The rest of the market" likely represents 90% or more of the collecting public and is characterized by people putting together collections in grades generally shunned by investors, speculators, and registry participants. The coins that make up this market are very rarely seen in the glossy auction catalogues. This market moves upward in a slow steady pace if at all. The key and semi-key dates of such collections do quite well as there is solid competition for those dates while the common dates generally languish. In my opinion there is very little correlation between this market and the high end market. I believe the outlook for this market's key and semi-key dates will generally remain strong because there is more of a commitment to continue to collect and market dips are seen as an opportunity rather than as a tragedy. I also believe the collectors in this arena enjoy numismatics at least as much as those who only participate at the high end. Saving enough money to finally purchase that one coin that one has desired for a long time and then finding it in the condition desired brings a different excitement than being able to buy any coin at any time one wants.
the other 75% of the market who knows?
michael
3 "DAMMIT BOYS"
4 "YOU SUCKS"
Numerous POTD (But NONE officially recognized)
Seated Halves are my specialty !
Seated Half set by date/mm COMPLETE !
Seated Half set by WB# - 289 down / 31 to go !!!!!
(1) "Smoebody smack him" from CornCobWipe !
IN MEMORY OF THE CUOF
Mike
Lincoln Wheats (1909 - 1958) Basic Set - Always Interested in Upgrading!
New people need to stay interested after the disappointing shock. And that shock is the revelation that just because a coin they own is old, it isn’t valuable; and, the bicentennial quarters they have been pulling out of circulation for 28 years are worth 24 ½ cents a piece. If they can get past that, as I did, they’re in!
And not selling!
Early proofs are my true love right now. They are total underdogs. I'd love to see them actually get involved in the "Bull Market". Fat chance, huh? Oh, well.
I suspect that a lot of the money that was driving the market is know bailing out. Thus the huge number of coins coming to market.
THE END IS COMING!
Nah. I know 4 billionaires that are still buying all they can get their hands on. The rest of us peons are just waiting for the right coins.
Auctions are the place to sell now.... people see moon money and want to participate - instead of privately placing their collection with a dealer. So the turnover in collections is more visible. Additionally, the market is much, much bigger so the sales are much, much bigger. The market is healthy.
I hope you are right. Or maybe I hope you are wrong.
al h.
Bruce Scher
Hogwash !!! While the Eliasberg sales and the state quarters program have certainly increased awareness of coins at both ends of the value spectrum, this market is clearly driven by exogenous (i.e. non-numismatic external economic) factors. I don't buy that the Eliasberg sale provided enough supply to jumpstart a bull market. I give the rise of Ebay and the internet much more credit. But most of all, there is simply nowhere else to put money. Bond yields are low, and bond values will fall if interest rates rise. Low interest rates have driven real estate through the roof and created bubble-type markets in many areas. The stock market is lackluster, moving sideways, and likely to suffer adversely if rates rise. The dollar has fallen 30% and has less buying power than ever (although certain fools would have you believe that this is somehow good for the economy - imagine, your principal asset declines in value, and you are told to believe that is good.) Conversely, commodities, including gold have risen. Yet the global economy is striving ... and all that new money has absolutely nowhere to go.
By the way, I always found the notion of a connection between the value of gold bullion and the prices of numismatic gold coins to be absurd. How could anyone claim that the increase in Indian $2.50, for example, is driven by gold prices. Nonsense. It is driven by hoarding, mass marketing via Blanchard and others, hype, and market manipulation. There ain't much bullion in a quarter eagle.
Rare coins will always have value to collectors and hobbyists. But when the investors, ad hoc vest pocket dealers, speculators, et al. realize that the coins they are hoarding (in the hopes of flipping them for a profit) have VERY LITTLE INTRINSIC VALUE except to hobbyists, then we are done. It is a classic market cycle. Nothing new. Has happened countless times in countless areas over centuries. WILL it end? You bet your posterior it will. However .... WHEN will it end? That is much harder to say. The internet has had a tremendous impact and resulted in increased demand ... but eventually the external economic factors will bring it down.
Best,
Sunnywood
Sunnywood's Rainbow-Toned Morgans (Retired)
Sunnywood's Barber Quarters (Retired)
Experience the World through Numismatics...it's more than you can imagine.
You'll see something similar, albeit to a lesser extent, when coin people balk at paying ever increasing prices for the high end coins.
It will happen; it always does. When? I don't have crystal ball, and I don't worry about it.
"Seu cabra da peste,
"Sou Mangueira......."
The Ludlow Brilliant Collection (1938-64)
to nearly finish the collections/start a new series/upgrade. The market will break when the Fed. pushes interest rates higher
to offset the declining dollar vs. Euro. Then the market will split between high end coins(strong) ans the rest of the
MS-60+ "stuff" which will stagnate, then drop substancially due to overbought dealer inventory.
Gold price running up (this has years left). Coins will not falter while gold is running up. And gold will run as long as we have all the current economic problems. The dollar has to end its slide to even have a chance of reversing gold.
Strong inflation is still to come following all the easy money printed and loaned out in the past 4 years.
Until interest rates are in the double digits you won't see much of a slowing in this market.
Too many blue chip areas of the coin market have not participated in this "bull" ..... later bust, seated, Barber, nickel and copper type, Morgans, Peace dollars, classic commems, etc. These tend to be the more speculative areas, especially in higher grades. They attract the speculators and late-to-the-party investors. Not enough of them are here yet. Every strong market of the past 30 years has been lead by type coins....but so far not this one. Type still has to play a role imo.
The one true indicator that has worked in the past is the true tolling of a deep recession. If that occurs, the party may end prematurely.
But since the FED wants to inflate, the recession may be held off for a few years.
roadrunner
Fun will be OK. The market will continue on an upward
trend for selected super grade classic and super rare coins and around
the end of 2005, it will just stop. Buyers will be scarce and prices will
just sort of hang out there as a fine mist. For the next two years
prices will trend lower and high grade coins will go back into hidding.
Expect to see more coins of lower grade start filling the auction catalogues
starting about the summer. If true, it is not the end of the world, nor will the drop
be catastrophic . Its just your normal ebb and flow of the coin bussiness. Excessive
enthusiasm seems to appear closer to the end then the beginning of a boom.
Truth of the matter, nobody knows anything for sure. These are just opinions. Some may be
correct, some may be wrong and some may be only dreams and wishful thinking. We shall
see what we shall see.
Camelot
Gold may increase (because of a weak dollar), but this doesn't affect the price of most collector coins sitting in dealers' inventory. The best rarities will continue to bring high prices at auction from the wealthy few who can afford them, but I expect it will be more difficult to sell common coins after a couple of weak shows.
My collection is not made of the kinds of coins which have been promoted heavily in the last couple of years. If I had CC Morgans, registry-set-quality moderns or monster toned PCGS coins I would be selling them now. Instead, I look forward to upgrading my collection again in a few months.
The value of eye appealing coins will continue to increase for a long long time, in my opinion.
Liberty: Parent of Science & Industry