Good foreign copper opportunity
Posted: Wed May 04, 2011 1:25 pm
If you can get your hands on 1cent and 5cent coins from Trinidad & Tobago for cheap, do it.
These coins have been steadily minted since 1966, in bronze, and the composition has not changed since. I ran a magnet past my 1966-2007 collection of T&T coins, and not a single one of them was attracted.
The 1cent coin is 17.8mm in diameter, weighs 1.95 grams, and is worth USD$0.0016. The break-even copper spot price for this coin is $0.36/lb. Divide the current copper spot price by that number, and you get the number of times over face that the coin's copper content is worth (subject to exchange rate fluctuations). At the current 1 TTD = 0.15625 USD and copper at 4.1416/lb, these coins have a melt value of 1140% of face value. Current melt value is 1.78 cents USD, so if you can buy them for less than 2 cents apiece, you're coming out ahead in copper.
The 5cent coin is 21.0mm in diameter, weighs 3.30 grams, and is worth USD$0.0078. The break-even copper spot price for this coin is $1.07/lb. Divide the current copper spot price by that number, and you get the number of times over face that the coin's copper content is worth (subject to exchange rate fluctuations). At the current 1 TTD = 0.15625 USD and copper at 4.1416/lb, these coins have a melt value of 386% of face value. Current melt value is 3.01 cents USD, so if you can buy them for less than 3 cents apiece, you're coming out ahead in copper.
In other words, the price of copper would have to drop to nearly 25% of current levels for these coins to lose their copper bullion value. The 5cent coin is worth less than a bronze US cent, yet contains more copper. And the best part is... there is absolutely no sorting necessary! The composition has remained bronze for over 40 years without interruption.
These coins have been steadily minted since 1966, in bronze, and the composition has not changed since. I ran a magnet past my 1966-2007 collection of T&T coins, and not a single one of them was attracted.
The 1cent coin is 17.8mm in diameter, weighs 1.95 grams, and is worth USD$0.0016. The break-even copper spot price for this coin is $0.36/lb. Divide the current copper spot price by that number, and you get the number of times over face that the coin's copper content is worth (subject to exchange rate fluctuations). At the current 1 TTD = 0.15625 USD and copper at 4.1416/lb, these coins have a melt value of 1140% of face value. Current melt value is 1.78 cents USD, so if you can buy them for less than 2 cents apiece, you're coming out ahead in copper.
The 5cent coin is 21.0mm in diameter, weighs 3.30 grams, and is worth USD$0.0078. The break-even copper spot price for this coin is $1.07/lb. Divide the current copper spot price by that number, and you get the number of times over face that the coin's copper content is worth (subject to exchange rate fluctuations). At the current 1 TTD = 0.15625 USD and copper at 4.1416/lb, these coins have a melt value of 386% of face value. Current melt value is 3.01 cents USD, so if you can buy them for less than 3 cents apiece, you're coming out ahead in copper.
In other words, the price of copper would have to drop to nearly 25% of current levels for these coins to lose their copper bullion value. The 5cent coin is worth less than a bronze US cent, yet contains more copper. And the best part is... there is absolutely no sorting necessary! The composition has remained bronze for over 40 years without interruption.