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Future Numismatic Fallout from the Ohio Situation...

291fifth291fifth Posts: 25,139 ✭✭✭✭✭
According to articles in the Toledo Blade there is now (surprise) a movement in the Ohio legislature to formally prohibit unregulated investment vehicles such as coins from any Ohio government agency's portfolio. I suspect this will soon spread to other states as well. This will effectively diminish the importance of coins as "investment" items.

Can coins ever be taken seriously as investment vehicles or, as I suspect, do the "players" in the field preclude progress from ever being made.
All glory is fleeting.

Comments

  • RYKRYK Posts: 35,800 ✭✭✭✭✭
    It does not bother me in the least that coins would or will be prohibited from state run investment portfolios, no less than it would bother if art, diamonds, baseball cards, or beanie babies were similarly banned. Sure, you can make money trading all of these things, but all are unregulated, have little or no intrinsic value, have relatively large buy-sell spreads, and are difficult to value.

    If an individual wants to invest in coins (or art...) with his/her own money, that is one thing. For a governmental agency to invest with public money, it is entirely different.
  • I'm with RYK on this. If you and I desire to "invest" it's one thing. We can make determinations about the risk, the bid-ask spreads, and the market and take the risk if we desire. A government agency has to hand this over to someone else, and that system, like this situation here, is ripe for potential fraud.
    ...AlaBill
  • BAJJERFANBAJJERFAN Posts: 31,612 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Even if they allowed coins as "legitimate investments" I doubt it would have much impact on the area I collect in as I don't think they will be buying common date Morgans and stuff like that tho I expect that over time a billion dollars put into the coin market could have some serious impact. They would have the ability to corner the market on many series and issues to the point that many collectors might give up because the coins they want and need are no longer available. How would they ever sell their holdings at a profit if the folks who would buy them have long since left the market.
    theknowitalltroll;
  • roadrunnerroadrunner Posts: 28,371 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Yes, I agree. But when 401K's get shattered in the upcoming years, and show losses over 10-15 years, the same will be said on stocks.
    What they heck were thinking putting stocks so easily into retirement accounts without the proper oversights and safety nets available to the consumers.

    roadrunner
    Barbarous Relic No More, LSCC -GoldSeek--shadow stats--SafeHaven--321gold
  • BAJJERFANBAJJERFAN Posts: 31,612 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Exactly!! Anything negative that has ever been said about coins as investments can easily be said about stocks.
    theknowitalltroll;
  • LongacreLongacre Posts: 16,717 ✭✭✭
    There was a front page article in the NY Times about this yesterday. I don't have a link to the article, but the article focused on Noe being a golden child of the Republican party in terms of fund raising, and how all of the filthy dirty politicians are now running in the opposite direction from him.
    Always took candy from strangers
    Didn't wanna get me no trade
    Never want to be like papa
    Working for the boss every night and day
    --"Happy", by the Rolling Stones (1972)
  • SFDukieSFDukie Posts: 618


    << <i>There was a front page article in the NY Times about this yesterday. I don't have a link to the article, but the article focused on Noe being a golden child of the Republican party in terms of fund raising, and how all of the filthy dirty politicians are now running in the opposite direction from him. >>


    Here it is:

    NYTimes-registration required

    it's not in this article, but Noe was also on the citizen's advisory committee on coinage for the mint and recently resigned that position.
    Don
  • morgannut2morgannut2 Posts: 4,293
    The impact of this story over time might be very significant if new collectors get second thoughts. Of course these Retirement Funds will continue to just hedge for a declining dollar with various foreign currency hedges, gold/silver mining stock mutual funds, and longer term precious metal futures puts/calls depending on their stock/foreign currency exposure.
    The Ohio voters and newspapers won't be able to understand these standard protective investment hedges, so they can go ahead and lose a few 100 million (offset by greater capital gains) on these investment hedges. These vehicles do the exact same thing as coins, but the Fund manager doesn't have to explain it to the idiot politicians.
    morgannut2
  • ElcontadorElcontador Posts: 7,740 ✭✭✭✭✭
    This is more of a political story than anything else. As long as the fund's coins are not all dumped on the market at the same time, I don't see any numismatic fallout from the sordid adventure.

    At some point in time, there will be more regulation in numismatics, as this is an overall trend. When enough people complain about getting ripped off, and the dollar amount is deemed to be material, then you'll see it.

    Bajerfan, your statement is so general as to be without value. If you're talking about penny-stocks -- or anything else which has been manipulated repeatedly over time -- then your statement has some merit. But to lump penny stock and Third World start up stocks with the likes of G.E. or Caterpillar means that your statement lacks credibility. Furthermore, the coin market is thin, very volatile, and routinely manipulated. If you call putting money into coins an 'investment,' then you simply do not understand the concept of investing.
    "Vou invadir o Nordeste,
    "Seu cabra da peste,
    "Sou Mangueira......."
  • BAJJERFANBAJJERFAN Posts: 31,612 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Those who put down "coin investing" versus the more traditional investment vehicles like stocks or mutual fund don't differentiate between the good and bad stocks or the good and bad MF's either. Their implication seems to be that "any" traditional investment is better than coins. Go back for the last couple of years on the topic discussed here to see what I mean. At least that is my take on it.
    theknowitalltroll;
  • roadrunnerroadrunner Posts: 28,371 ✭✭✭✭✭
    My statement on stocks includes the standard bearers as well.
    In general anyone investing their 401k's in standard stock indexes (Nasdaq, DOW, S&P, Lg Cap, Mid Cap, etc) within 10 years from now will be screaming for legislation based on huge losses. This has nothing to do with penny stocks and the like, but the mainstream investment vehicles that have been touted to Americans as "can't lose investments" and "sure-fire way to riches." Yet something like commodities (and gold, silver, coins, etc in particular) get villified.
    Had the BWC scandal been about losing $50 MILL in risky stocks or bonds, you'd have never heard about it. Those are good losses that help "build" the economy.

    roadrunner
    Barbarous Relic No More, LSCC -GoldSeek--shadow stats--SafeHaven--321gold
  • Coins are too illiquid for the Ohio type of investment.
  • BillJonesBillJones Posts: 35,730 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Banning coins and other collectable from investment portfolios? I’m all for it.image

    Coins are for collectors. In the long run all investors do is mess up the coin market. They drive prices up to speculative levels, and then when their “investments” are not performing the way they think they should, they lose money and carp and complain about it.

    No, coins do not belong in investment portfolios and that goes double for pension funds and other old age and retirement funds.
    Retired dealer and avid collector of U.S. type coins, 19th century presidential campaign medalets and selected medals. In recent years I have been working on a set of British coins - at least one coin from each king or queen who issued pieces that are collectible. I am also collecting at least one coin for each Roman emperor from Julius Caesar to ... ?
  • roadrunnerroadrunner Posts: 28,371 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Coins are for collectors. In the long run all investors do is mess up the coin market. They drive prices up to speculative levels, and then when their “investments” are not performing the way they think they should, they lose money and carp and complain about it.

    No, coins do not belong in investment portfolios and that goes double for pension funds and other old age and retirement funds.


    This is like throwing the baby out with the bath water. The real problem is the word "investment" and that such a thing actually exists. It doesn't. If everyone is doing it....by definition it cannot be an investment (stocks long term for instance). Not your home not your stocks and bonds either. Not everyone was into stocks prior to the 1990's, but they are now. Investment? I think not? A mania? Probably. One exception might be when everyone saved via a savings account at their local bank. That was safe and everyone was doing it. Today that account has been replaced by home "ownership" with no money down ARM's and interest free loans.

    Since coming off the gold standard, there really is no such thing as investments in equities as existed prior to this. They are all speculations based on the greater fool theory. Not having a currency tied to something tangible has guaranteed a sizeable and constant rate of inflation that has accentuated the boom and bust cycles for various markets (i.e. volatility). It's going to get worse before it can ever better. People will complain about losing their 401k's and pension funds down the road too. It's all based on the same house of cards (unlimited fiat money). The last 10 years of stock and housing prices is precisely a "speculative" phase like we've never seen before. The FED and Treasury have provided all the fuel needed to make these swings occur more than ever before. Label it an investment if you will, but there are other less attractive names for it. They drive prices (homes, stocks too) up to speculative levels, and then when their “investments” are not performing the way they think they should, they lose money and carp and complain about it.........like anything else.


    roadrunner
    Barbarous Relic No More, LSCC -GoldSeek--shadow stats--SafeHaven--321gold
  • BillJonesBillJones Posts: 35,730 ✭✭✭✭✭
    THE GOLD STANDARD ... such balderdash, and from a big time liberal Bushwhacker too ... I thought that liberals uniformly prided themselves as “intellectuals” who believe they are intellectually vastly superior to everyone, especially conservatives.

    If you would bother to study some late 19th century economic history (when application of the gold standard was in full force) you would realize that the gold standard was not the panacea that you image it to be. Having the stock of money (money supply) in a straitjacket, which is limited by the amount of a commodity (gold) that a nation’s central bank holds, is a recipe for booms and busts and generally hard times for small businesses and working people. All the gold standard does is to place a limit on the amount of money that can be in circulation at a given time. That can be a good or bad thing depending upon the amount of gold that is in a nation’s treasury. Why should a growing economy have its potential limited by the supply of ONE commodity, gold. Why is gold a god?

    AND if it is perceived that a nation’s currency is worth less than the amount of gold for which it can be redeemed, there will be a “run” on the treasury, which will cause the system collapse in any case. That was one of the root causes of the Panic of 1893, which Grover Cleveland spend most of his second term as president trying to correct.

    In recent years Alan Greenspan through the Federal Reserve as done a commendable job managing the money supply. What inflation there has been, has been caused by increases in energy prices, which have little to do with the stock of gold.

    No, let the gold standard RIP. It died as a practical matter at the end of the 19th century and lingered on in the minds of some government officials until the mid 1960s. Not even that many right wingers harp on it these days, which leads one to wonder why a liberal, who professes to want better things everyone, especially the poor, would want to make life worse for everyone except perhaps the mega-wealthy.
    Retired dealer and avid collector of U.S. type coins, 19th century presidential campaign medalets and selected medals. In recent years I have been working on a set of British coins - at least one coin from each king or queen who issued pieces that are collectible. I am also collecting at least one coin for each Roman emperor from Julius Caesar to ... ?
  • TrimeTrime Posts: 1,863 ✭✭✭
    "Invest" is to put money into some venture to make a profit. The term does not define the risk to reward ratio. It does not guarentee that it is not speculative ( to put money into a risky venture to make huge profits). There is some reason to believe that coins , even those graded by TPG may have a large range of cost ( market value) and may have limited liquidity. The later is inherent in rareness. Speculative attitudes and practices have deep roots and seems to be part of many of us.
    The coin business is not greatly regulated. This seems to suit many members of the forum; it may also increase the chance that the few (?) that use this lack of oversight to disadvantage (cheat) the less sophisticated will do so. Most on this forum espouse strong ethics and hate to see others hurt, we disagree how to accomplish this lofty goal. Sometimes those that have emotional ties to the freest of markets lack the skills to survive in them.
    Macro-ecconomic strategies are always a great topic for debate; sometimes those participating in the debates have only a vague understanding of the issues. This makes for very interesting debates which are not always enlightening.image
    Trime
  • ElcontadorElcontador Posts: 7,740 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Well said, Bill. Roadrunner is very knowledgeable about 19th century type coins and related matters. When he posts about these topics, I read him, word for word, and read him again.

    However he is on a jihad against our financial markets. With few exceptions, most people who lost lots of money in the financial markets were victims of scams and hype. The perpetrators of such fraud for the most part a) did time in jail b) are being tried currently, or c) are doing time now. All you need to do is read the occasional Wall Street Journal to be aware of this.

    Roadrunner, I'm still waiting for my S & P 500, total stock market index, etc., to go south, as you have been stating as a fact for I don't know how many years. I pay no commissions, no account maintenance fees, and I'm investing in some of the most solid companies on the planet.

    BTW, how has your gold been doing lately? What kind of commission / mark up are you paying on your rare coins, many of whose prices have been manipulated by insiders? How do you like those Bust Dollars?

    "Vou invadir o Nordeste,
    "Seu cabra da peste,
    "Sou Mangueira......."
  • BillJonesBillJones Posts: 35,730 ✭✭✭✭✭
    If Roadrunner lost money in the stock markets, the abandonment of the gold standard should be the last reason (in fact not a reason at all) for his problems. The main culprits were.

    1. Crooked business executives who “cooked the books” in order to fatten their bonus checks and other compensation.
    2. Incompetent CPA firms that did not do their job. Harrah for the fact the worst major CPA of them all, Arthur Anderson, went bust. THEY DESERVED IT! imageCapitalism weeks out the stupid, the lazy and the incompetent, and Arthur Anderson was all three IN SPADES.
    3. Stupid investors who flock like lemmings to drive up the price of stocks beyond the current and future earnings potential of the firms in which they “invest.”

    If you lose money because of the conditions cited above it does not matter if the money is “fiat money” or backed by gold, IT’S GONE.

    Retired dealer and avid collector of U.S. type coins, 19th century presidential campaign medalets and selected medals. In recent years I have been working on a set of British coins - at least one coin from each king or queen who issued pieces that are collectible. I am also collecting at least one coin for each Roman emperor from Julius Caesar to ... ?
  • mrearlygoldmrearlygold Posts: 17,858 ✭✭✭
    How do you like those Bust Dollars? >>








    I don't know how Roadrunner feels about them but after essentially tripling my money on them, my assets went into other areas.

    Sure was fun for years though. And if you are so enamored by the stock market, where do you find the time to break away from that "action" to come here and presumably talk about coins?

    Tom
  • keetskeets Posts: 25,351 ✭✭✭✭✭
    funny how full time dealers who make their livelihood off of coins are dead set against anyone else getting into the game. not that i'm advocating a Government Agency to do that, but isn't a full-time dealer who derives his/her entire income off of coins and plans his/her retirement and life around that income being just a bit hypocritical when they put the kabash on coins as an investment??
  • roadrunnerroadrunner Posts: 28,371 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Bill, you lost your way long ago as a democratic and those wounds have jaded your vision. It's ironic that the very same federal coins you now collect with such emotion are what this country was founded on, a gold and silver monetary standard. A standard that lives were given for. I certainly don't feel bad knowing I side with the founding fathers who believed in economic freedoms and control of the size and functions of government. It is unfortunate that while silver and gold are mentioned as the only forms of payment in our US Constitution, that it is now totally ignored.

    I've never owned bust dollars, always thought they were too common.

    Having the stock of money (money supply) in a straitjacket, which is limited by the amount of a commodity (gold) that a nation’s central bank holds, is a recipe for booms and busts and generally hard times for small businesses and working people. All the gold standard does is to place a limit on the amount of money that can be in circulation at a given time. That can be a good or bad thing depending upon the amount of gold that is in a nation’s treasury. Why should a growing economy have its potential limited by the supply of ONE commodity, gold. Why is gold a god?

    Gold keeps govt's honest, nothing more or less. The same boom and bust cycles you so dread are exactly what has been occuring since coming off the gold standard. And had our dollar not been the reserve currency of the world, those swings would have been far severe.

    AND if it is perceived that a nation’s currency is worth less than the amount of gold for which it can be redeemed, there will be a “run” on the treasury, which will cause the system collapse in any case.

    That's exactly why YOU DON'T print more money than you have backed by a tangibly linked assets. So devaluing the dollar over the past 92 years by 95% is a good thing to you. And not too coincidentally most of this has occured since severing the gold link.
    Why as it severed? Not because it wasn't working but because the Europeans wanted our gold rather than our currency in debt payments. They were not foolish. The large amount of unsupported currency printed over the years has indeed given us a standard of living that upon the backs of the rest of the world. Do you think this will continue? Do you think our economy will continue to grow just by printing money and selling our debt overseas?
    You have much to learn my fiat friend.

    In recent years Alan Greenspan through the Federal Reserve as done a commendable job managing the money supply. What inflation there has been, has been caused by increases in energy prices, which have little to do with the stock of gold.

    Inflation has nothing to do with rising prices per se. That's just one of the possible symptoms. Rising prices are often the result of increasing monetary supplies. That is inflation. You must learn the definitions. Prices can be stationary in many areas with massive inflation occuring. But yes, the result is eventually transmitted to higher prices. By continuing to borrow $2 billion a day from overseas or hedge funds, we've continued to "buy" cheaper imports and ultimately exported our inflation to other countries. Look around, you can see double digit inflation in Europe and Asia.
    It will make its way back here.

    As a fiat money supporter you are still a major proponet of out-of-control socialistic spending and therefore a "liberal." Without that unlimited fiat money cash cow, there could be no such spending.

    roadrunner
    Barbarous Relic No More, LSCC -GoldSeek--shadow stats--SafeHaven--321gold
  • roadrunnerroadrunner Posts: 28,371 ✭✭✭✭✭
    With few exceptions, most people who lost lots of money in the financial markets were victims of scams and hype. The perpetrators of such fraud for the most part a) did time in jail b) are being tried currently, or c) are doing time now. All you need to do is read the occasional Wall Street Journal to be aware of this.

    What planet are you speaking about? The average guy got their shorts handed to them in workplace based 401k's. And I guess I may have to agree with you that the present 401k system is a scam just as pension funds are. And the perpretators of such fraud do not do any time in jail. I'd say the average guy in our 401k at work lost 30-50% of their 401k's on basic indexed funds...this was TR Price too...not Enron. Very very few of these perpetrators are being prosecuted and large amounts of their wealth are safely protected.
    What do you think, maybe 1% of the scammers have been successfully prosecuted and funds recovered?

    Roadrunner, I'm still waiting for my S & P 500, total stock market index, etc., to go south, as you have been stating as a fact for I don't know how many years. I pay no commissions, no account maintenance fees, and I'm investing in some of the most solid companies on the planet.

    Keep that money there. You'll find that southerly direction before you know it. When the market corrects again, it won't matter how solid your companies are, they will head south together, though yours won't dive as fast. If you stay put as you say you do, you'll lose 1/3 to 1/2 of your S&P stake at some point. Just remember to hold for the long haul as most financial advisors still recommend.
    The various financial markets are defying all logic and have been doing so for several years. I just look at all the mania as the bigger fool theory. Market cycles will eventually wipe out your gains if you leave it alone....they always have....same for coins.

    BTW, how has your gold been doing lately? What kind of commission / mark up are you paying on your rare coins, many of whose prices have been manipulated by insiders? How do you like those Bust Dollars?

    Gold is going through another multi-month correction, same as it has been doing since 2001. Is that a surprise? Will you be here on the next up leg to say how badly gold is doing? When the uptrend is strongly broken, I'll be the first to say so.

    I pay little if any commissions on the coins I have purchased. Many of them have been purchased at wholesale levels. I buy and sell frequently. The few times I buy at "retail" are when the price guides are foolishly low. If I don't think I'm getting a coin at 0% markup to wholesale, I usually won't jump unless that piece has great long or short term potential. If my choices were to buy coins at 10-25% markups from the retailers I would be out of coins. The coins I am into (mostly 19th century choice/gem type) have not been manipulated to any great extent. If they were, I would look elsewhere. It's probably the lack of easy manipulation that keeps them currently out of favor with respect to registry type coins. But at the same time the nice ones have been quietly put aside while Registry fever rages. They will have their time.

    3. Stupid investors who flock like lemmings to drive up the price of stocks beyond the current and future earnings potential of the firms in which they “invest.”

    Unfortunately Bill this is the vast majority of the buyers out there.
    Insider money has been exiting the stock market for some time now.
    It's Mr. and Mrs. American that continue to plunk the money down.
    But at least I can see that you and El Contador feel that you are in the 10% that consistently outperform and outmaneuver the market in general. Congratulations. Why are you then wasting your time beating yourself up in coins where all this rigging, high commissions, and grading problems all exist? It would be much easier playing in the unrigged game of stock and currency arbitrage.

    roadrunner
    Barbarous Relic No More, LSCC -GoldSeek--shadow stats--SafeHaven--321gold
  • morgannut2morgannut2 Posts: 4,293
    They were creating POTENTIAL new wealth when some stock brokers gathered under that Button Tree in New York City, and new corporations were formed. And they are still doing the same thing in 2005, out in Menlo Park California, with new start-ups The Gold Standard wasn't DIRECTLY important in corporation formation in 1799 or 2005. It has nothing to do with investments, creating new companies or stock, and new stock's impact on the growth of the largest economy in the world. But, gold was a constant financial barrier, causing repeated panics that affected stock liquidity and U.S. wealth formation until 1933.
    morgannut2
  • roadrunnerroadrunner Posts: 28,371 ✭✭✭✭✭
    And in removing the absolute gold link and creation of the FED, the wealth "transference" machine was kicked into gear. Is this the wealth that we have all been seeking. 95% of the country's created wealth has been transferred through fiat money creation and constant inflation since 1913. Who do you suppose has this 95%?

    roadrunner
    Barbarous Relic No More, LSCC -GoldSeek--shadow stats--SafeHaven--321gold
  • Everything we put our money into, other than necessities, IS an investment whether we like it or not. You may choose not to sell your coins and take them to the grave but your heirs will sell them and then they will have created gain or loss. Many older people will not spend their stock money or bank money either, out of fear of running out of money. When those families liquiedate there is a gain or loss.

    THEREFORE COINS ARE AN INVESTMENT. That doesn't mean we can't enjoy them. That doesn't mean they have to be allowed in pension or 401-K plans to qualify as an ivestment. Remember, the Feds only want things in qualified plans that they can control, ie the stock market through the SEC or hard assets because it is tied to something other than subjectivity.

    It is good that coins don't go into pensions because the only way they can be allowed in is with government controls. Can you imagine Uncle Sam's employees grading your coins?

    Gripe all you want about grading services and their problems, believe me, they pale into insignificance when compared to whatever the government controls. At least we have some ability in an open market to affect what is going on...............by looking at what we buy and not overpaying for plastic.
  • morgannut2morgannut2 Posts: 4,293
    Answer to who has the 95%?? A lot went to wars, some necessary and or unneeded. A lot went to the manufacturers who benefited from this "exploded-distroyed " wealth--examples: the Bronfman Family in Canada and Dupont Family are examples thru their control of Dupont. The Social Security system is not a fund, so money printed to offset these hidden deficits is lost to payments- but these are commonly needy people. Look you could pick any Government program and say that money is being printed to support that.

    But who got the $? The controling families of every major corporation got the surplus (capital gains + dividends), their employees got jobs and retirement funds--a major unresolved issue, in my mind more important than the New York Stock Exchange's general issues.
    morgannut2
  • orevilleoreville Posts: 12,287 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Who has this 95%?

    Social Security has the 95% along with foreign countries in the form of the debt that the US government and the various US government guaranty funds and corporations owes.

    By the way, The United States of America is following the path of Argentina in which for 50 years Argentina staved off dealing with their financial mess of budget deficits and printing too much money so that they finally had to suffer over the past 5-7 years.

    The US is living off the savings of the past but will someday deal with the new reality. The US is no longer the rich country it was back in the 1950's and we have 10 -15 years left of living off the savings of the Greatest Generation.

    God bless America.
    A Collectors Universe poster since 1997!

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