Recession?? . . . Affect on Coin Collecting and Investing??

there's been a lot of talk about the economy going into a recession - how would this affect the rare coin world - good or bad?? and how are you going to handle your coins and future purchases knowing that a recession might be on tap?
currently putting together a EF/AU/BU 18th & 19th Century Type Set; and CC Morgan Set
just completed 3d tour to Iraq and retired after 28+ years in the US Army
just completed 3d tour to Iraq and retired after 28+ years in the US Army
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I give away money. I collect money.
I don’t love money . I do love the Lord God.
Coin's for sale/trade.
Tom Pilitowski
US Rare Coin Investments
800-624-1870
In this credit crunch, will coin people sell what they can (coins) instead of what they should have (poorly bought real estate)?.
On the other hand, money has come in during the past during inflationary times. Just look at 1977-1979. Is the dollar decline vs. the Euro, and oil a repeat? Those were the days when coins skyrocketed.
Will history reppeat itself? Stay tuned......
==Looking for pre WW2 Commems in PCGS Rattler holders, 1851-O Three Cent Silvers in all grades
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Of course, economic theory makes psychology look like a black and white science
willing to accept coins that are under graded by 1/2 to 1 point.
Nothing like a down market to tighten grading all up and down the line.
This will include the grading companies. It will take more
of a coin to bring the price at any grade from XF on up.
Camelot
1) Average Joes and Janes collecting with modest bidgets would, naturally, reduce their spending on average commensurate with their reduced discretionary funds.
2) Dealers need to eat too and their transactions do account for a lot of the economic activity that builds the market momentum. I think the full-time guys would become increasingly selective with an eye on the exit for each and every piece they consider. Languishing inventory is unacceptable.
3) The Mint-direct program would be destroyed UNLESS bullion speculation becomes extremely strong. The typical customer, not the flipper or the dealer, would buy the needs over the wants. In a strong bullion hedging economy, certainly many investors would be parking their dinero in gold over the riskier and inflation-murdered alternatives.
4) Top of the heap collectors probably will be as active as ever and probably moreso. The occasional piece entering the market from an individual or entity that has failing finances elsewhere and needs the redemption, will be like chum to those foreclosure sharks. This goes triply for the dealers at that tier of the market.
NSDR - Life Member
SSDC - Life Member
ANA - Pay As I Go Member
That's just for collecting, not investing.
If you are uber upper class, you have money to burn in any economy, so speculators in this class would be buying before anything got too cheap. Whether this is enough to stabilize prices depends on the supply.
I don't pretend to understand the coin market. In a bad economy or good economy, there always seems to be big dollars chasing coins.
Just my guess, but I don't see a major correction anywhere in coins.
<< <i>Wooden nickels will triple in price. >>
That means I'm out!
Jim Rogers on the dollar and recession
Two, with a collapsing dollar, gold and silver will be trading well and rising in value. So the bullion market will be as strong as ever.
I agree with most that the top market will stay relatively strong but the bottom will lag.
But this recession will be worse than the 30's since we are now as a nation and as people in FAR more in debt. I don't really think anyone really knows just how things will play out.... even the people who planned for all this to happen and destroyed this once great country.
Rob
The only things I'm selling are those I have upgraded from and I can hold those until there is a recovery!
By definition a recession is two quarters of negative growth. So the earliest we could have a recession is the end of the first quarter of 2008, six months from now.
<< <i>The third quarter grew by 3.9%.
By definition a recession is two quarters of negative growth. So the earliest we could have a recession is the end of the first quarter of 2008, six months from now. >>
Ah, a needed dose of reality to all this doom and gloom. The economy is good, and folks are missing it. You can always cherrypick an area here or there that isn't doing well, and you can always predict a recession, because it's bound to happen someday, some year.
Apropos of the coin posse/aka caca: "The longer he spoke of his honor, the tighter I held to my purse."
I heard it directly
from Henny Penny
and Loosy Goosey!
Camelot