Buying Silver Certificates circa 1968

Below is a picture taken sometime in 1968 at my Los Angeles office. On June 24, 1968 Congress halted the redemption of all silver certificates for silver. As a result, we were very busy buying and selling vast quantities of silver certificates. To give you an idea of the magnitude of activity, we were buying and selling over $1,000,000 worth of silver certificates each week. That's in 1968 dollars, by the way. If you have questions, please feel free to ask..... Joel, Sr.
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<< <i>I find it hard to believe JMHO >>
We had large ads in the Los Angeles Times consistently during that time and, as a direct result, we had customers lined out door all day, every day, seven days per week. If you were around during the Great Silver Run of 1980, you would find it easier to believe. With regard to the silver market in 1980, we were doing $1,000,000 per DAY.
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But hey i could be wrong
at the high thats forty bags a silver per day
and i was around during the eighties and again I find it hard to believe
I am a believer. Neat photo. I wished I had enough sense back then to cash in all my SC's, not that it was that many though.
Welcome to the board. It bumps the average age up a little bit
Please explain. You had customers ready to purchase $1M/week at a premium AFTER the congress halted redemption?? Sorry, I am not old enough to remember, but I don't understand people paying a premium for the silver certificates after redemption stopped.
<< <i>"On June 24, 1968 Congress halted the redemption of all silver certificates for silver. As a result, we were very busy buying and selling vast quantities of silver certificates. To give you an idea of the magnitude of activity, we were buying and selling over $1,000,000 worth of silver certificates each week. That's in 1968 dollars, by the way. If you have questions, please feel free to ask..... Joel, Sr."
Please explain. You had customers ready to purchase $1M/week at a premium AFTER the congress halted redemption?? Sorry, I am not old enough to remember, but I don't understand people paying a premium for the silver certificates after redemption stopped. >>
I never said that we bought the silver certificates AFTER the redemption deadline. The deadline, as set by Congress, was June 24, 1968. The announcement was made exactly one year prior to the deadline, so for that year......up to June 24, 1968.....we were busy buying silver certificates at a premium. Some sellers didn't want to sell the $1 silver certificates at our premium offer. Instead they decided to hold them, hoping they would increase in value. Unfortunately for those individuals, each silver certificate was only worth $1 after the deadline had pasted. It was an interesting time for our business. By the way, I was 30 years old and my son (the little guy with the toy gun in the photoe) was 4 at the time.
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But you were dealing with 2000 people with 500 silver certificates each per week
Again not trying to put you down but the numbers seem high
Editted to say I was alive in 1967 when my mom redeemed the silver certificates at the bank, no big lines
<< <i>based on your web site and ebay , I don't see a million dollar business
But hey i could be wrong
at the high thats forty bags a silver per day
and i was around during the eighties and again I find it hard to believe >>
The dollar figures I quoted were for 1968 and 1980, not today. However, we still run a multi-million dollar per year business. The aforementioned years were boom periods and hobby veterans would have no trouble believing what I posted. Just ask David Hall, Leon Hendrickson, Larry Shepard (who, btw, submitted his coins through us during the early days of PCGS).
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Cool pic from 1968. Thanks for posting it.
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Tom Pilitowski
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<< <i>Welcome Joel, I had the line out my place back in 1980. Never got to a million a day then but I DID get 25% of the way there. And I was in a little town in southern New Jersey back then.
Cool pic from 1968. Thanks for posting it. >>
Thank you for the welcome Tom. As you pointed out in your post, one's geographical locations--and level of advertising--had a direct correlation to the level of business. My office was in LA, one of the three major population centers in the U.S.
In 1980 we were selling bags of 90% silver for $35,000 per bag. And we were able to sell more bags each than we could buy. I constantly asked myself how we could buy more bags and one day I realized that they were selling 10-bag contracts on the exchange at the time. So, I called my broker and made an offer for a 10-bag contract. He asked me, "what month do you want to buy for." I informed him that I wanted the delivery asap and he said "oh, you want the cash forward." Each contract was $320K, so I asked for two contracts ($640K for 20 bags). I walked across the street to his office and handed him the cash. In those days we could have $640,000 in cash and actually hand the money to someone in exchange for goods. Today you cannot... We had automatic bill counting machines at the time to handle all of the cash in and out. Three days later Brinks pulled up with my 20 bags and they were all sold by the end of the day--actually before lunch! I called my broker and told him that I needed more of the 'cash forward' deals. That's we did in those good ol' days.
Joel
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<< <i>
<< <i>I find it hard to believe JMHO >>
We had large ads in the Los Angeles Times consistently during that time and, as a direct result, we had customers lined out door all day, every day, seven days per week. If you were around during the Great Silver Run of 1980, you would find it easier to believe. With regard to the silver market in 1980, we were doing $1,000,000 per DAY. >>
just before Christmas in 1979 I purchased a hoard of
franklin mint ingots from an older gentleman for 110K called Madison Coin locked the price put it in the car, drove down and sold it for 125K.. buy/sell that's over a quarter million in about an hour and people were lined up for blocks with duffel bags of silver and gold.. I believe you.... those were crazy times
<< <i>I remember those days well. There was even a coin shop on Wilshire Blvd. in Santa Monica that changed its name to The Silver Redemption Center (making it sound somewhat official! LOL). There were lines out the door down the sidewalk of average folks cashing in. I think that the premium got as high as 1.68 if my memory still functions. Crazy days! >>
Yes, I do remember that dealer changing his store name to The Silver Redemption Center. We paid from $1.55 to $1.68, depending on the quantity. If I remember correctly there were two government redemption centers -- one on the East Coast and one on the West Coast (San Francisco) -- were the public or dealers could redeem silver certificates for either silver granules or silver bars that were 0.996 pure. I am still offered some of those government bars today. They are marked with a grease pencil to identify their random weights. For example 111.16 ounces.
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<< <i>1.68! After 40 years, still remember down to the last penny. My mind hasn't gone, contrary to what many of you think! >>
<< <i>1.68! After 40 years, still remember down to the last penny. My mind hasn't gone, contrary to what many of you think! >>
I can remember things from 40 years ago too.
Do you remember what you did this morning?
Ray
<< <i>
<< <i>1.68! After 40 years, still remember down to the last penny. My mind hasn't gone, contrary to what many of you think! >>
I can remember things from 40 years ago too.
Do you remember what you did this morning?
Ray >>
THis morning? When was that?
Experience the World through Numismatics...it's more than you can imagine.
<< <i>This has been a fun read, thanks for sharing.
<< <i>Below is a picture taken sometime in 1968 at my Los Angeles office. On June 24, 1968 Congress halted the redemption of all silver certificates for silver. As a result, we were very busy buying and selling vast quantities of silver certificates. To give you an idea of the magnitude of activity, we were buying and selling over $1,000,000 worth of silver certificates each week. That's in 1968 dollars, by the way. If you have questions, please feel free to ask..... Joel, Sr.
My grandmother was probably in that line. I have a SC star note which I cherish from her.
is that Fred Gwynne with the pipe? I would have thought The Munsters paid better.
That should help put some of the numbers here in context
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I couldn't remember at the time of Woody's Silver thread but now I remember getting $1.30 from my friend Harry who was starting out in the coin biz.
He mentioned something about I was supposed to have 100 of them to get that premium.
I think we had about fifty certificates total.
"Inspiration exists, but it has to find you working" Pablo Picasso
<< <i>A friend of my brothers bought a brand new Corvette from my Father in 1969, I think the price was $4500.00 ( it was under 5K, for some reason I remember $4500. Big block, burgundy color. )
That should help put some of the numbers here in context
That is a lot less than I paid for my vette!!!
Neat pic, why does it look like Joel Jr. is holding a gun (I know he isn't but that was my first thought)? What is in his hands?
Neat pic, why does it look like Joel Jr. is holding a gun (I know he isn't but that was my first thought)? What is in his hands?
Well, in fact he is holding a gun, but it was a toy gun.
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<< <i>Neat pic, why does it look like Joel Jr. is holding a gun (I know he isn't but that was my first thought)? What is in his hands?
Well, in fact he is holding a gun, but it was a toy gun. >>
Glad you had security on hand!
Neat pic and story.
<< <i>Welcome Joel, I had the line out my place back in 1980. Never got to a million a day then but I DID get 25% of the way there. And I was in a little town in southern New Jersey back then.
Cool pic from 1968. Thanks for posting it. >>
Hi Tom, small world, I'm from the same area originally. Then I'm sure you recall Pep Levin in Pennsauken and his antics at Rochester Formal Wear. My grandfather was a tailor there and in on some of the shenanigans... fortunately he passed away long before Pep moved into food stamps...
john
Classic pic!
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occured, not only in LA, but throughout the country, especially
on both coasts. I was an observer, not a participant, although
I was a coin collector at the time.
Steve Markoff, of A-Mark fame, was another VERY aggressive dealer
buying these certificates, and flying up to SF to redeem for the
Silver Bars - called "grease bars" at the time. (they were poured
bars, not struck bars).
That time frame, as well as 1979/80 was absolute craziness !!
No, silver certificate redemption was fixed price at the rate of $1.292929292 per fine troy ounce or .7734375 ounces per dollar.
I think one reason for the silver pellets was to discourage people from redeeming individual dollars. Actually if they did make a piece of the proper weight, that would just set off another collecting frenzy. So, perhaps the government did not have much choice there.
I remember some enterprising soul selling a silver souvenir board consisting of a silver certificate, silver dollar and silver granules. But it was not $1* worth of granules. He was pocketing quite a bit of that.
* Edited to add - perhaps it was one dollar's worth of silver at the then current price, but less than what the $1 silver certificate yielded.
K
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<< <i>Welcome Joel, I had the line out my place back in 1980. Never got to a million a day then but I DID get 25% of the way there. And I was in a little town in southern New Jersey back then.
Cool pic from 1968. Thanks for posting it. >>
Hi Tom, small world, I'm from the same area originally. Then I'm sure you recall Pep Levin in Pennsauken and his antics at Rochester Formal Wear. My grandfather was a tailor there and in on some of the shenanigans... fortunately he passed away long before Pep moved into food stamps...
john >>
Hey John,
Actually I was a little deeper South than y'all
I was one town over from here:
Great thread
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Tom Pilitowski
US Rare Coin Investments
800-624-1870
John
Speaking of silver certifiecates, I stopped by Joel's office yesterday and saw a nice group of silver certificates, as well as a ton of neat Civil War notes.
Actually that is more than that. figure 40K in silver they were buying saints @ 955 and 100g gold was selling @2700 if you bought five.
So that is just over 72K total.
Given that, it is EASY to believe 1 Million a week a year before congress stopped redemption on silver certificates, even IN 1968 money. That was a neat story by the way.
<< <i>I was in a bullion exhange place the other day in the LA area and in the fifteen or so minutes I was there watched over 60K change hands in one way or another. One woman bought 5 100g bars of gold, a guy bought 4 1000oz bars of silver, and a lady was selling a ROLL of saints.
Actually that is more than that. figure 40K in silver they were buying saints @ 955 and 100g gold was selling @2700 if you bought five.
So that is just over 72K total.
Given that, it is EASY to believe 1 Million a week a year before congress stopped redemption on silver certificates, even IN 1968 money. That was a neat story by the way. >>
PutTogether, thanks for the post. Given the current economic climate, we may be seeing more days like we did in the early 80s with the silver boom.
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