What is the negative effect of the hockey puck frenzy?
JJHulin
Posts: 82
If you look at open to buy money being hypothetically set, what do you all feel the negative effect of the current hockey puck buying frenzy will have on other coin values?
I know you all have seen this just as I have. These are going for way more than they should be on Ebay and other sites. This kind of premium has to negatively effect other coins that are now gaining less attention from potential buyers and therefor dropping their value on the open market. Do you think it will effect silver or gold coins more? Will this effect bullion coins or all coins?
I would love to hear some opinions on this.
Jay
I know you all have seen this just as I have. These are going for way more than they should be on Ebay and other sites. This kind of premium has to negatively effect other coins that are now gaining less attention from potential buyers and therefor dropping their value on the open market. Do you think it will effect silver or gold coins more? Will this effect bullion coins or all coins?
I would love to hear some opinions on this.
Jay
0
Comments
Forgive me for being callous but I don't consider hockey puck buyers collectors.
It will have absolutely no effect on traditional collectibles.
Lance.
It will have absolutely no effect on traditional collectibles.<<<
PCGS Registries
Box of 20
SeaEagleCoins: 11/14/54-4/5/12. Miss you Larry!
way, then I will use them for paper weights.
Camelot
<< <i>No effect on anything other than new Mint bullion. It might make buyers more cautious...and some more eager to jump in early.
Forgive me for being callous but I don't consider hockey puck buyers collectors.
It will have absolutely no effect on traditional collectibles.
Lance. >>
Yes, TV sellers and some others sell some of this stuff for outlandish prices, but that happens with virtually anything they think they can hawk, modern or classic, bullion, or clad, or copper, or paper even. Fools tend to lose money and would have likely lost their money on some other promoted item, instead of the new issues.
Some posit that all this activity in modern issues subtracts from the money available for classic coins. There is an case to be made, but I'm not sure of this conclusion, because many flippers take their profits and spend it on classic coins. A good many final purchasers of the new issues have little interest in classic coins and would never have spent their money.