How do buyers determiine "Paying X Face Value"?

Found an OLD receipt, dated 5/30/98
Silver was at $5.07
Dealer was paying 3.4 x Face
On silver dollars, this would be 67% of Spot or 87% of silver content
($5.07 x .77 =$3.90)
87% x $3.90
Seem like "odd' %'s.
What am I missing?What are they paying now?
Silver was at $5.07
Dealer was paying 3.4 x Face
On silver dollars, this would be 67% of Spot or 87% of silver content
($5.07 x .77 =$3.90)
87% x $3.90
Seem like "odd' %'s.
What am I missing?What are they paying now?
0
Comments
Dealers are paying 29 - 29.5.
coinflation.com calculates this for you.
spot market price($5.07) X .675 = 3.42, where .675 represented the expected weight in troy ounces of pure silver per dollar face of 90% coinage.
The purchase could have represented a buy of very low grade dimes, which often are heavily discounted for weight by the simple fact that they often sustained much heavier use/wear in commerce than quarters and halfs. Could have been a judgement call. The typical range for the weight factor is .685 to .720, with .720 representing BU quarters/dimes most often. The weight factor can be fixed also, with premiums or discounts to the spot market price used as an adjustment for the material presented or market conditions.
"Everything is on its way to somewhere. Everything." - George Malley, Phenomenon
http://www.american-legacy-coins.com
Check out the Southern Gold Society
Here are some examples of how it might be figured at what percentage:
Melt @ $42.00
$42 x 0.60 = $25.20 per face dollar
$42 x 0.65 = $27.50 per face dollar
$42 x 0.70 = $29.40 per face dollar
$42 x 0.75 = $31.50 per face dollar
Melt value @ 42.00
$42 x 0.77344 = $32.48 per face dollar
President, Racine Numismatic Society 2013-2014; Variety Resource Dimes; See 6/8/12 CDN for my article on Winged Liberty Dimes; Ebay
Worry is the interest you pay on a debt you may not owe.
"Paper money eventually returns to its intrinsic value---zero."----Voltaire
"Everything you say should be true, but not everything true should be said."----Voltaire
spot x .77344 for silver dollars
then they knock off whatever they want so they can make money reselling it
it's that simple
<< <i>spot x .7234
spot x .77344 for silver dollars >>
Those numbers only apply to Mint State coins. Dealers typically use 0.715 (dimes, quarters, & halves) and 0.77 (dollars) for average circulated coins.
Worry is the interest you pay on a debt you may not owe.
"Paper money eventually returns to its intrinsic value---zero."----Voltaire
"Everything you say should be true, but not everything true should be said."----Voltaire
I like the coinflation.com method of calculating it.
Go to their silver calculator, put in 2 halves, 4 quarters, or 10 dimes and it will calculate what spot is in X times face. So if it comes out 31X face, and someone offers you 29x face, then they are paying 29/31 of spot. But this is really an irrelevant intellectual exercise and is not how 90% is traded.
The multiplier has nothing to do with spot. It is all supply and demand. When I post a buy on the BST at 29X face, that is just what the market is and has nothing to do with current spot. As spot goes up, the market follows it but not in a direct mathematical correlation. Sometimes the buy is closer to spot and somtimes it is further back. Just like silver bars. Sometimes they trade above spot and sometimes slightly below spot.
I do have people, even dealers, calling me saying "will you buy these at spot" and I say "My buy price is ??x face which is a little less than spot but is what the market is". Often it results in a long discussion to try to convince them I'm paying fairly.
Right now I would pay 29x face for 90% silver and 30x face for silver dollars and commems.
--Jerry