Your coin collecting philosophy
SkyMan
Posts: 9,493 ✭✭✭✭✭
Just wondering... I assume most people here have a yearly coin collecting budget. If you see a coin you quite like in an auction, but it's expensive and will blow out your budget for the year, will you bid to win that coin, or do you prefer to buy multiple (less expensive) coins that you like, throughout the year? Assume the one expensive coin is rare, and will continue to be expensive over time, but there are multiple examples of it out there in the market so that you will most likely have another shot at one in 2 - 4 years if you decide to hold off on it.
Basically do you prefer to spend your yearly budget on one rarer expensive coin or multiple less expensive but still enjoyable coins?
Basically do you prefer to spend your yearly budget on one rarer expensive coin or multiple less expensive but still enjoyable coins?
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So I track every cent spent.
But coin money is different. If I'm looking for something and I see a coin I like, then I buy it. It's my only category I don't have a budget for.
it will only be more expensive than now. Remember the "common" will be available almost always; but KEY and semi_KEY only increase in cost!
Destroyed my budget once with a 1916-D Mercury; did recoup when collection was sold, but sure missed opportunities to upgrade others. And
that's probably why I don't collect coins much any longer. Just my two cents.
Looking for CU $1 FRN 20160523 - any series or block. Please PM
Retired
knocked me out from buying coins for a few months while I recovered. And while I really like the coin I saved up for, it's tough for
me not to buy a couple of coins each month. So now, what I try to do is put away a % of my coin budget each month and let
it build up for a period of time until I can use it to buy a "big coin." Meanwhile I can buy a few smaller coins here an there
and still be happy.
A few year ago I needed a very expensive coin to complete my type set. I bought it at auction, but it significantly impacted my budget for the year. In the middle of the year I saw a perfect California gold slug ($50 gold) for my collection at a good price. The wife would not let me pull the trigger so that was it. Now people are buying problem coins for more than I would have paid for that piece in AU. The slug is now a "trophy coin" for well healed collectors who are often not fussy about whether or not the grade on the holder matches the coin inside. It's just the way it goes.
coin and banknote dealer since 2003
<< <i>No philosophy, no budget. I buy what I like when I see it. >>
Thank you for phrasing my answer for me.
I have no set goal, nor an list.
Eclectic, keeps my life interesting and Happy.
Suppose that does not make me a collector, however, I do indeed enjoy what I have accumulated.
If there is a will, I will find a way.
BST transactions: dbldie55, jayPem, 78saen, UltraHighRelief, nibanny, liefgold, FallGuy, lkeigwin, mbogoman, Sandman70gt, keets, joeykoins, ianrussell (@GC), EagleEye, ThePennyLady, GRANDAM, Ilikecolor, Gluggo, okiedude, Voyageur, LJenkins11, fastfreddie, ms70, pursuitofliberty, ZoidMeister,Coin Finder, GotTheBug, edwardjulio, Coinnmore, Nickpatton, Namvet69,...
<< <i>No philosophy, no budget. I buy what I like when I see it. >>
Yep. Well, mostly. There's always a spending limit somewhere.
<< <i>No philosophy, no budget. I buy what I like when I see it. >>
Me too.
You do realize though that is a philosophy in and of itself.
I take a set amount each month from my earnings and put it in my coin money stash.
If I sell a coin, money stays in coin stash. Buy a coin, money comes from the stash.
It has evolved into a decent pile of cash and coins. I spend what I want when I want from the stash.
If I decide I want a little more cash in reserve, I liquidate a coin or two.
I don't have to do it that way but I like keeping it separate.
It also helps you to know if you are going in the hole or coming out ahead.
I know some here never sell anything, and that is great for some people.
I like selling from time to time. It has resulted in a better collection and a better since of how the market works and where it is going.
If it's a 10 cent face value coin, nothings gonna make it worth $10,000 to me.
As you can tell I'm a firm believer in patience!
Actually I try to keep a nice pile of 100's in the rat hole. Anything under 5k does not even get mentioned to the wife, anything over 5k I try to minimize the conversation with the wife unless I need the checkbook.
NGC registry V-Nickel proof #6!!!!
working on proof shield nickels # 8 with a bullet!!!!
RIP "BEAR"
If I like it and have the cash, I buy it......
Coin Club Benefit auctions ..... View the Lots
Doggedly collecting coins of the Central American Republic.
Visit the Society of US Pattern Collectors at USPatterns.com.
with my meek lil budget
<< <i>No philosophy, no budget. I buy what I like when I see it. >>
I'm with you. If I like it I'll by it.
Sometimes, it’s better to be LUCKY than good. 🍀 🍺👍
My Full Walker Registry Set (1916-1947):
https://www.ngccoin.com/registry/competitive-sets/16292/
-Develop an appreciation for rarity based on surviving population at various grade levels.
-Follow how often examples are offered for sale/auction.
-Learn to appreciate quality for the grade.
Experience the World through Numismatics...it's more than you can imagine.
Of course, sometimes selling a collection is too hard after it gets popular so I just put it on the back burner and hold onto it. Eventually it will become unpopular again.
<< <i>It all depends upon where I am with the collection.
A few year ago I needed a very expensive coin to complete my type set. I bought it at auction, but it significantly impacted my budget for the year. In the middle of the year I saw a perfect California gold slug ($50 gold) for my collection at a good price. The wife would not let me pull the trigger so that was it. Now people are buying problem coins for more than I would have paid for that piece in AU. The slug is now a "trophy coin" for well healed collectors who are often not fussy about whether or not the grade on the holder matches the coin inside. It's just the way it goes. >>
Good story Bill. Just goes to show you never know when something will show up on the market. And sometimes when it rains, it pours.
<< <i>I have been keeping my collecting money separate for years.
I take a set amount each month from my earnings and put it in my coin money stash.
If I sell a coin, money stays in coin stash. Buy a coin, money comes from the stash.
It has evolved into a decent pile of cash and coins. I spend what I want when I want from the stash.
If I decide I want a little more cash in reserve, I liquidate a coin or two.
I don't have to do it that way but I like keeping it separate.
It also helps you to know if you are going in the hole or coming out ahead.
I know some here never sell anything, and that is great for some people.
I like selling from time to time. It has resulted in a better collection and a better since of how the market works and where it is going. >>
+1 could not say it any better. this is my exact way of doing things.
Rainbow Stars
<< <i>No philosophy, no budget. I buy what I like when I see it. >>
Buy it now not later.
I think the collectors who will spend on a single piece or thereabouts may be more the "investor" type. I like to spend less, and of course I get less spectacular coins. But, I am a lover of history and getting various dates and mint marks that are significant or symbolic are fun. I like solid, collector coins, but am unwilling to 'invest' all my funds just to try to impact my portfolio. I have a lot more fun with various cool, but non-killer coins per year.
To each . . . have fun with 'your own'. I find that when I buy, I also cultivate relationships . . . whether on the BST, a website, or a fellow collector. Buying one 'killer' coin is super . . . but it denies me the fun of the hobby . . . .the interaction and the camaraderie.
That means something to me . . .
Drunner
I have NEVER enjoyed the hunt. It is far better to enjoy the item
then to wish you had it.
Separate budget. Money kept in separate bank account. No intermingling with billpay/checks/normal expenses.
Monthly allotment to coin account.
If a must have coin comes and blows the account, I HELOC the difference and stay on the sidelines until HELOC = 0 again.
In emergency situations (like the recent Cajun sale, or years ago when Pinnacle had the 1916-S and 1918-S WLH in P67 for sale), I'll try the lottery for the week before. If I win, then I can buy. This branch of my strategy has not had a track record of success.
Joseph J. Singleton - First Superintendent of the U.S. Branch Mint in Dahlonega Georgia
Findley Ridge Collection
About Findley Ridge
or is that :
Hate the dealer, love the coin. Buy anyway.
<< <i>No philosophy, no budget. I buy what I like when I see it. >>
No budget, but a philosophy; buy coins that fit into my set and have great eye appeal. It takes too much time to buy, then sell a coin for lack of interest. Better to love it so much that selling becomes impossible.
Tyler
K