Will 90% "Junk" Silver Coins Become Scarcer in the Future Due to Melting for Bullion??

How many folks out there think that if we have a prolonged Silver commodity price increase, say in the $15-$25+ range, the resulting melting of today's common 90% "junk" silver coins to produce silver bullion for various uses may some day make these coins a whole lot scarcer than they are today?
Something similar happened to Morgan Dollars resulting from the Pittman Act of 1919 during which authorization was made for the U.S. Government to melt up to 350 Million Morgan Dollars for trade to export silver. This subsequently caused the 1903-S and 1904-S Morgan Dollars to become significantly rarer than their original mintage would indicate.
What do you my fellow forum members think about this? Inquiring minds want to know!! ...and so do I.
Something similar happened to Morgan Dollars resulting from the Pittman Act of 1919 during which authorization was made for the U.S. Government to melt up to 350 Million Morgan Dollars for trade to export silver. This subsequently caused the 1903-S and 1904-S Morgan Dollars to become significantly rarer than their original mintage would indicate.
What do you my fellow forum members think about this? Inquiring minds want to know!! ...and so do I.

Stuart
Collect 18th & 19th Century US Type Coins, Silver Dollars, $20 Gold Double Eagles and World Crowns & Talers with High Eye Appeal
"Luck is what happens when Preparation meets Opportunity"
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I can see sterling silver and scrap getting melted so it's in a usable form, but isn't it very likely that the coins will simply get put into $1,000 face value bags and sold to "investors" rather than being melted? There does seem to be a very ready market for bags of silver coins, after all.
Check out the Southern Gold Society
Many buyers and most users need the silver as 999 so the refineries will probably begin melt-
ing coin and if these prices stay around then this melting could go on for years. It's relatively
simple to know what will get melted; whatever's available. This will be the type of silver still
circulating in the late '60's and BU rolls which have dropped under bullion value. Dealers will
also send in large quantities of silver and this will be even more interesting. After they pop
the quarters out of a collection which are worth a premium the rest will go into scrap buckets.
Some people will go through their accumulations and pull out culls and heavily worn coins for
melting.
Some coins are overrepresented in such accumulations because of wear, collector interest, or
just the era in which they were made. Large percentages of coins like '35-S dimes would be
destroyed because so many became worn but enough were saved to suppress the unc price.
'40-D quarters would be destroyed in very large percentages. In time even some of the truly
common dates could be significantly reduced. Keep in mind though that if there are a couple
million of a coin in unc then it's never going to be much appreciated in XF/AU. Many of the early
'50's dimes and quarters would fit this. Very common coins will remain mostly common simply
because so many will escape destruction through mere chance.
It was one small way that I could save a bit of numismatic beauty and history for the future.
Even though they are common date coins, to this day I still get enticed and mesmerized by the strong frosty white cartwheel luster of a choice unciculated 90% silver coin.
ar18: In reply to your previous post, I also have acted in a similar way (as mentioned above) for Choice Uncirculated 80% fine Canadian Silver Dollars because I have always felt that they were too pretty to be subjected to the melting pot. It wasn't long ago that I purchased these for slightly above melt at $2-$2.50 per coin ($3.30-$4.15 per OzT). If I remember correctly I believe that they have ~0.6 OzT Fine Silver in them.
Stuart
Collect 18th & 19th Century US Type Coins, Silver Dollars, $20 Gold Double Eagles and World Crowns & Talers with High Eye Appeal
"Luck is what happens when Preparation meets Opportunity"
If it gets up around $25 as you suggested, I think it will make a huge dent. $25.00 silver will make 90% bullion values around $2.00 for dimes, $4.50 for quarters, $9.00 for halves, and $20.00 for dollars.
Except for some key dates, the "Junk" would encompass nearly all Roosies, Washingtons, Kennedys, and Franklins under MS, most circulated Peace dollars, many Mercs between VF-G, and many G-4 Barbers, the list can go on.
I think many people here would say good riddance, as most of those above are only collected in MS-state, but what I worry about is the YNs of the future. Most of us started young collecting coins only worth a few bucks or face value, etc. If you cull some of the more popular collecting series for YN's, and make the most common obtainable grade of say Mercury Dimes a $40-50 AU piece, I think it is going to turn a lot of YNs off in the future. I can only hope those state quarters keep their interest, when in 2020, most 10 year olds won't be able to buy any silver coins if we sell off all the lower grades today.
"You Suck Award" - February, 2015
Discoverer of 1919 Mercury Dime DDO - FS-101
As implied in my earlier posts in this thread, I personally do not feel that choice mint state (1962-64 and older) Roosevelt Dimes, Washington Quarters, Franklin Halves and 80% fine Silver Canadian Dollars constitute "junk silver". However, the potential indiscriminate melting of such coins may include them as "junk silver" when it comes to sending them to the smelter.
I'd like to get opinions from others to find out how other forum members feel about this. Thanks!
Stuart
Collect 18th & 19th Century US Type Coins, Silver Dollars, $20 Gold Double Eagles and World Crowns & Talers with High Eye Appeal
"Luck is what happens when Preparation meets Opportunity"
and it's good to hear that copper and nickel prices will someday cause the melt of most of that "junk" too.
Liberty: Parent of Science & Industry
Stuart
Collect 18th & 19th Century US Type Coins, Silver Dollars, $20 Gold Double Eagles and World Crowns & Talers with High Eye Appeal
"Luck is what happens when Preparation meets Opportunity"
So yes, they will become scarcer. Good thing, because junk is dreadfully common, now.
Liberty: Parent of Science & Industry
the value of the Mint condition specimins.
If silver goes to 25 dollars an ounce, then bar
the door Nellie, pretty near everything goes into
the old chicken pot. This is true if silver stays at that lofty
level for a number of years.
Camelot
Morgannut2: You may also be right -- Only time will tell...
Stuart
Collect 18th & 19th Century US Type Coins, Silver Dollars, $20 Gold Double Eagles and World Crowns & Talers with High Eye Appeal
"Luck is what happens when Preparation meets Opportunity"
Now, if say all the Washington quarters after 1950 in less than EF were to be melted that means that the starting price on any available quarter 1950-64 will be $2.50 or $3.00, and all the YN quarter collections will be nicer since YN's won't be tempted by $1.00 coins out of bargain bins. I'm not sure that is necessarily a bad thing. Then when silver declines again to $5.00, those same quarters will drop in price to $1.00.
Which YN are we talking about who is going to be put off by collecting EF Washington quarters at a dollar a piece just because they have a tough time finding VGs for the same price?
As to the original question, of course they will become more scarce. They certainly won't become more common. But then, they couldn't get much more common! They're ubiquitous!
Any estimates on how many Morgans, etc. were melted at that time?
<< <i>What happened in the 80s when silver was run up to $50? I wasn't actively collecting at that time, but recall stores pooping up and ads in the paper begging for silver.
Any estimates on how many Morgans, etc. were melted at that time? >>
I wasn't actively collecting either when the Hunt Bros tried to corner the market in silver...but I don't recall ANY stores pooping
Seriously though... Even at $50/oz...when silver tanked and quickly became 1/10th that price the cost of "junk" silver eventually came down as well. I was buying Walkers at about $3 each last year...I just sold some for $4.50 each to the same shop. The people buying junk silver back then didn't melt it at $50/oz...why would we be melting it at $25/oz?
Leo
Successful BST transactions with: SilverEagles92; Ahrensdad; Smitty; GregHansen; Lablade; Mercury10c; copperflopper; whatsup; KISHU1; scrapman1077, crispy, canadanz, smallchange, robkool, Mission16, ranshdow, ibzman350, Fallguy, Collectorcoins, SurfinxHI, jwitten, Walkerguy21D, dsessom.
It seems to me that there should be a way to estimate the loss rate and then adjust it for aberrations like post-1964 hoarding and price run-up manias like in the late 1970's.
<< <i>yes and good riddance.
and it's good to hear that copper and nickel prices will someday cause the melt of most of that "junk" too.
I really don't appreciate all the wonderful coins that I collect (moderns and base metal coinage) categorized and demeaned as worthless "junk." Give it a rest please!!