Considering trading a few Pandas for AGEs... should this be an equal trade w/ no premium on either s
Thread title says it all ... only talking a three 1/4 oz, one 1/10 oz and one 1/2 oz
oh yeah... before anyone might ask "why?"... "because I want to"
oh yeah... before anyone might ask "why?"... "because I want to"
Re: Slabbed coins - There are some coins that LIVE within clear plastic and wear their labels with pride... while there are others that HIDE behind scratched plastic and are simply dragged along by a label. Then there are those coins that simply hang out, naked and free 
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TD
<< <i>... but don't expect a dealer to work for free.
TD >>
Being a coin dealer myself, I am shocked to hear you say that, sir... I must reply that I strongly resemble that remark
When gold and silver move together, it signals the coming end of fiat money.
<< <i>You might be able to find somebody who wants to swap even just for giggles, but don't expect a dealer to work for free. >>
Oh right, like the dealer watching him slide his pandas across the counter and then sliding his AGEs back at him at 1:1 constitutes "work". Gimme a break.
–John Adams, 1826
When gold and silver move together, it signals the coming end of fiat money.
Many members on this forum that now it cannot fit in my signature. Please ask for entire list.
<< <i>Moving inventory in any direction is work. Don't forget dealer's have to keep flawless records. And why would a dealer swap out something that sells for more than what he swaps in without some kind of payoff? >>
If the 0.85 oz of Pandas are worth less than 0.85 oz of AGEs then fine, charge the guy the difference for the swap. Record the transaction as an oz/oz swap on gold with a net to the dealer of $x. Both parties are still ending up with 0.85 oz of gold. Just don't call it work.
–John Adams, 1826