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Collecting strategy : silver or gold coins ?

I've been collecting silver coins ( Morgans and Franklins) for the last couple years.
My chief motivation has been finding beautiful coins, but I also have had the
investment value of the collection in the back of my mind.

Now that gold has topped $400 and seems to be continuing the upward trend,
my question is , should I switch to gold coins ?

Per coin , we're talking a lot more money but, could it be the way to go as both
a nice collection goal and, or investment ?

Your opinions are appreciated and, usually taken to heart.
Thanks ,
Skipper

Comments

  • mgoodm3mgoodm3 Posts: 17,497 ✭✭✭
    gold won't stay high forever. Collect the coins you like.
    coinimaging.com/my photography articles Check out the new macro lens testing section


  • << <i>Collect the coins you like >>




    Ditto.
  • Ditto-squared. Collect what you enjoy. Don't worry about the price of precious metals, which I would not invest a single dollar in anyway. The intrinsic value of a rare coin is usually irrelevant, but less so in moderns.

    Edited to Add: If you DO happen to enjoy collecting gold coins -- especially modern ones -- and you DO happen to, coincidentally, start collecting right now when gold is at a high, you could conceiveably get burned a little bit if gold drops in value over the next couple of years. However, I just threw this in as a disclaimer. I still wouldn't worry about it. Just collect what you enjoy and forget about the price of precious metals.
    Author of MrKelso's official cheat thread words of wisdom on 5/30/04. image
    imageimage
    Check out a Vanguard Roth IRA.
  • clw54clw54 Posts: 3,815 ✭✭✭
    Collect whatever you'll want to look at often.
  • LakesammmanLakesammman Posts: 17,461 ✭✭✭✭✭
    You forgot copper! You can't beat the color and warmth of copper!!!!

    image
    "My friends who see my collection sometimes ask what something costs. I tell them and they are in awe at my stupidity." (Baccaruda, 12/03).I find it hard to believe that he (Trump) rushed to some hotel to meet girls of loose morals, although ours are undoubtedly the best in the world. (Putin 1/17) Gone but not forgotten. IGWT, Speedy, Bear, BigE, HokieFore, John Burns, Russ, TahoeDale, Dahlonega, Astrorat, Stewart Blay, Oldhoopster, Broadstruck, Ricko, Big Moose, Cardinal.
  • I have switched to gold coins, $20 double eagles (PCGS holdered only) becuase I feel they have the best investment potential and more importantly they are more liquid.I have seen very little movement in most silver coins. I do have a 1885CC PCGS MS64 morgan wich I purchased in 1994 for $260.00, I should be able to get $500 or more for that, but that is the only coin that has shown any movement at all in the last 10 years. Collecting gold coins makes my life simple also. It helps me to save cash quickly. And I know that if I ever need to sell the gold coin, I will be able to do so easily , not that I ever will, but after all that was the original reason I started collecting coins to begin with, investment, it didnt really turn out that way with silver coins, but it is like that with gold coins. Some one reading this will say, why not just collect gold bullion coins, maple leafs, ect,cause I like old coins. I have to know for a fact I have a TOTALLY liquid commodity for me to be happy and secure, and I am not convinced that silver coins will bring that liquidity that gold coins deliver. I am willing to pay a premium for a numismatic gold coin, but I have to know that I can at least bank on the current price of gold. In a couple of years, I will switch back to silver again after I aquire a few more gold pieces. I rather buy 1 gold coin a year than several silver coins. To put it simply, GOLD COINS OFFER THE MOST BANG FOR THE BUCK !!!!
  • Yes ! Copper ! So many coins , so little money .
    Sumner 1984 I believe David Hall agrees with you .
  • My strategy, is to collect low mintage coins...moderns..I would love the older ones but I am a little short on cash for those....I started to collect sets and still maintain the ones I have...Low mintage is my game in silver.
  • If you want to invest in gold primarily because you want to capture the rise in spot gold prices, coins are a poor investment vehicle. When you purchase gold bullion coins like eagles or leafs (or even gold bars from banks like Credit Suisse), you have to pay a dear premium over the gold spot price to acquire the coins -- i.e. part of your investing capital goes right into the pockets of middlemen (or the U.S. Mint) to effectuate the transaction, instead of going to work for you. You can get a much bigger bang for your buck, get a much more liquid investment, and signficantly reduce transaction costs by investing in gold-related stocks, derivatives, and similar financial instruments tied to gold. A good beginner's primer is here for coins (the author likes them) and then here for the bulk of your investment dollars in stocks.

    So don't rush out and buy modern gold eagles or commems to catch spot gold's rising tide -- you're going to get killed by the premium the U.S. Mint (or dealers) charge over the spot price, along with the transaction costs. (And where are you going to store all that bullion, anyway? It's impractical unless you have a quality safe or insured deposit box at a financial institution.)

    Now if you want to invest in gold coins because you think their numismatic values are going to rise, that's a different question, and frankly the astronomical premiums rare (and some modern) old gold coins fetch has virtually nothing to do with the gold content or the spot price of gold, but instead is derived from all the other qualities discussed here (e.g. condition, rarity, etc.).

    Personally, I prefer collecting gold coins. I prefer the rarity of gold, the cachet of gold coins and prefer the way gold coins age. Simply put, more fun with gold.

    However, I've been impressed with the silver, nickel and copper collections I've seen these boards, and especially the high-grade, proof and prooflike old silver collectors have. (I've even picked some up for myself.) Also, I bet people here have earned sizeable returns by collecting recent copper and silver coins, like the Type 2 Lincolns and the 1998 SMS Kennedys. These returns have nothing to do with commodity prices.


    In any event, here's a portion of a recent Forbes article for the silversmiths:


    The Case For Silver
    by James Grant


    Gold may well be a better monetary asset, but the white metal has many more practical uses, from the arts to medicine. And its consumption exceeds its output. Silver, No. 47 in the periodic table, is the Boston Red Sox of precious metals. Many are its winning attributes, and loyal are its fans. It ought to win, and it will win, but it hasn't won in a long time. Following is the thumbnail bullish case for the commodity variously known as the "white metal," the "poor man's gold" and--with a nod to its storied volatility--the "restless metal." . . .

    What is the bearish case for silver? That was delivered in the form of a Sept. 25 announcement by Eastman Kodak. Henceforth, the film-and-camera giant said, it will invest much less in conventional photography and much more in the digital kind. The silver price, around $5.30 an ounce at the time of the news, crumpled. Two weeks later the quote was $4.81.

    As there is a Red Sox Nation, so there is a Planet Silver. Upon hearing the Kodak news, the inhabitants of this small spheroid sighed. Defeat was snatched from the jaws of victory--again.

    But wait: The apparently devastating bearish news was absorbed and brushed aside. True, 200 million ounces of silver are earmarked for photographic film every year, about 24% of estimated world consumption in 2002. But the market knows all about digital imaging. The market knows that conventional photography, although it will not be tomorrow's technology, will not just disappear tomorrow, either. It will dwindle, even as new applications for silver come to the fore. As a result the silver price has turned back up. The metal trades today at about where it did when Kodak unloaded its news.

    What are these new applications? "Invisible silver," a transparent coating of silver on double-pane thermal windows, is one. But the major looming use for silver is the ancient monetary one. The metal that used to be money will serve as a store of value once again.

    The dominant global monetary asset is, of course, the dollar. But what is a dollar? It is a piece of paper (or an electronic impulse) of no intrinsic value. The dollar is money by dint of government fiat. The eminent monetary theorist Ben S. Bernanke, now a governor of the Federal Reserve Board, has
    observed that the cost of producing a dollar is trifling and that the government can produce as many dollars as it wants. He so stated in his official capacity during the recent deflation fright. So saying, Bernanke has lent the establishment's prestige to the fringe-dwelling gold and silver bugs.

    . . .

    Gold is a better monetary asset than silver, but silver has better supply-and-demand characteristics than gold. Since the Silver Institute began keeping track in 1990, silver consumption has annually outpaced silver production, and not by a little. The cumulative 13-year difference adds up to 1 billion ounces.

    You can't just print silver: You have to dig it up. And you don't just dig it up, either. You have to find it. And without the necessary prerequisites (land, labor, capital, environmental permits) you can't just find it. Hence, relative to the great and growing supply of dollar bills, there isn't a lot of silver to go around.

    William A. Fleckenstein, a silver bull from way back and a director of Pan American Silver Corp., a mining company, says that a reasonable estimate of the total aboveground silver stock would be 20 billion ounces. Perhaps two-thirds of that 20 billion are unavailable to the market, at least at prevailing prices. Best estimates of "liquid" silver--bullion and nonnumismatic coins--run to no more than 400 million to 1 billion ounces, at the high end, only a little more than $5 billion worth.

    In 1980, in an epic miscalculation by the Hunt brothers, the price of silver peaked at $49 an ounce. I am counting on the serial epic miscalculations of the Fed and the Treasury to push the price, if not back to $49, at least a little closer to it.

    James Grant is the editor of Grant's Interest Rate Observer. Visit his homepage
    at www.forbes.com/grant.
    Realtime National Debt Clock:

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  • Dlimd2, that's a pretty good strategy !
    Lower mintages means rarity in the future.
    With older coins , mintages may be high but
    surviving coins may be rare, due to circulation,
    meltings, etc.
    I believe the value of a coin collection will be,
    A: The rarity of the coins
    B: The demand for those coins
    C: The enjoyment the collector gets from those coins.
  • Skipper, that is what I am counting on....dont have much now, but hopefully on down the road it will all turn around....I feel fortunate at the moment with one of my finds...and hopefully it will turn out to put me in a much better postion.
  • From the response I've gotten from my post
    It appears there is an equal split of opinion between
    Gold
    Silver
    and whatever turns you on !

    I believe there will always be a market for both
    silver and gold coins.
    Thanks for the reponses and good luck to each of you !
  • ALUMINUM OR BUST !


    Regards
    Mike Rogers
    ultramike@collector.orgimage
    much rather be tried by 12 as carried by six !~!

    SHOOT FIRST-QUESTIONS L8TR...

    If its nice and you REALLY like it " buy it " sure beats laying awake wishin you had, PLUS you will never forget or FORGIVE YOURSELF for letting it get away-and remember you can always pedel it to regain most of $ . Just one of many of " buying politics I utilize.
    Besides I really lost sleep and beat myself up yo learn this simple procedure !~!
  • BaleyBaley Posts: 22,663 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Two words: Type Set.

    Liberty: Parent of Science & Industry

  • cladkingcladking Posts: 28,747 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Collect what you enjoy and you'll probably do better financially in the long run.

    Unless you're buying coins where bullion value is a large part of their value or
    you expect sufficient increases that it's a large part of their value than it makes
    little sense to worry about the melt value of a collection anyway. There are no
    gaurantees that any profits which may materialize from the trading of bullion will
    go into gold or silver coins as they did in 1980. Profits would likely go into what-
    ever is hot at the time even if that happens to be the stock market, bonds, or
    copper indian cents.
    tempus fugit extra philosophiam.
  • nwcsnwcs Posts: 13,386 ✭✭✭
    Let me put it this way, I'm selling all the gold coins I don't intend to keep for years.

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