Commems still being hammered in the Price Guide
I thought that they would have bottomed out about this time.
It could be just the fact that the guide is catching up with reality.
It could be just the fact that the guide is catching up with reality.
There once was a place called
Camelot
Camelot

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YIKES!
<< <i>Commems have been in the price guide gutters for over a decade. But you don't build a nice commem collection buying at price sheet levels. >>
unless you look in the BST now
I'm a spammer I'm a spammer I'm a spammer
<< <i>Commems have been in the price guide gutters for over a decade. But you don't build a nice commem collection buying at price sheet levels. >>
...
Not, never was a big fan other than a couple of the nicer designs.
<< <i>I thought Laura said the turnaround had begun. >>
Well...if you think about it a minute or two...you can't expect the "movers and shakers
they can stock up and THEN go for the bull...run that is...bullrun...ya know?
Camelot
<< <i>The Confederates won at Bull Run..........TWICE! >>
Well, the one at Pamplona the bulls seem to win every so often when some drunks aren't quite as fast/agile as they think they are.
U.S. Type Set
<< <i>The Confederates won at Bull Run..........TWICE! >>
and the bear gets a dozen crispy cremes for that one
just goes to show... ya gotta be a rebel to succeed in this ornry business...many shades of grey to navigate...
Reference: Coin Links
<< <i>If the retail investor is getting hammered in net worth, there is zero incentive/opportunity to buy commemoratives - or any collectible. Taxation will be substantially higher for the wealthy in the next few years....many reasons to not see an upside or even a catalyst for an upside. >>
So you as a wealthy person will pay a higher tax on a coin purchase than I will as a not so wealthy person?
<< <i>So you as a wealthy person will pay a higher tax on a coin purchase than I will as a not so wealthy person?
Wealth destruction on a nationwide scale results in many assets classes declining in value, eg home prices, stock prices. Discretionary spending decreases with real or perceived wealth destruction. Increased state & Federal taxes will create even less discretionary spending. I'm not referring to the taxes you pay on coins - which is an issue on its own!.
Reference: Coin Links
Ah..mm. That would be Manassas....
FloridaBill
<< <i>I thought that they would have bottomed out about this time. It could be just the fact that the guide is catching up with reality. >>
Bear, is it fair to say that the guide is catching up to a) prices realized at the auctions -- and -- b) not the prices dealers are still demanding on commems for sale?
Reference: Coin Links
Besides collectors being short of cash, how about the dealers that keep a large inventory of white commems? Even if dealers keep their show prices high, but no one is buying, what's the end result? Cash flow drives the market. If a product is not selling well, those are slowly weened from inventories for products that do sell.
Commems will bottom after this recession bottoms or until monetary inflation takes hold.....whichever comes first.
roadrunner