68Camaro wrote:I think the better question is, how many of us will care about the price of copper in 2050? It's great for the under 40 crowd to think ahead (so it's an appropriate question if you fit that category), but by 2050 I will most likely have been long gone, and even for my daughters the price of copper will be low on their concerns.
If the government doesn't either stop cents altogether, or release them to be melt-able, by 2030, then I will have to chalk up my mini-hoard as the result of an interesting but expensive hobby.
Yeah. Like how in the 1990's and early 2000's I did not even think for a second that 90% silver still circulated in the coins. I found a Mercury dime once in the 1980's or thereabouts in my change and my brother sarcastically told me I was rich with a whopping 35 cents worth of silver found. I think that shot down at the time any interest about silver. Gold at $200 or $300 at the time was not even something I would consider too. By the time the dotcom era rolled around, stocks were making great gains for the while and metals were kind of laughed at by the investment community and the like. College age and up to people in their 40's could take some risk hoarding copper right now. They are already up a few mutiples in metal value when the Lincoln copper cent has about 3 cents worth of metal in it. If copper doubles in the next couple decades and the melt ban is lifted, 50 cents rolls of copper cents could theoretically trade for $3 a piece. Probably enough money to buy a roll of toilet paper by then