WizardTN wrote:Just buy and stack.
Number21 wrote:WizardTN wrote:Just buy and stack.
That's an issue I struggle with. Right now I see pennies as being the better investment. I don't have enough cash on hand to just hoard piles of metal. To get the same return on nickels as pennies, I'd have to get 15 cents/nickel vs just 3 cents for a penny.
I'm just curious, how many nickel "nickels" are left in circulation in Canada even with the alloy recovery program? How quickly did they disappear?
WizardTN wrote:______________________________________________
(I think Realcent members should pool $50/mo and corner the "nickels market")
theo wrote:I buy on average $10 a week. Its small potatoes of course, but then I 've been doing it for over two years. I would guess that about 50 RC'ers are buying at least that much.
John Rawls of survivalblog.com thinks we have a few years at most to accumulate nickels. http://www.survivalblog.com/nickels.html Personally, I think he's a little optimistic. At some point (probably early to mid 2012) I believe banks will restrict the sale of nickels (along with pennies) to commercial accounts and then not too long after that only to approved retail businesses.
WizardTN wrote:It's a matter of allocating resources and setting priorities. I am on a fixed income (SS), luckily my home is paid off and I have no credit card debt.
When my monthly check arrives, a fixed budgeted amount goes into the joint account to cover all expenses. The rest is my "play" money and is roughly allocated to 1/3 prep supplies, 1/3 silver accumulation, 1/3 penny & nickel accumulation. You dont have to get a $100 brick, just a few rolls at a time adds up over time.
My view on nickels is this: It is CuNiBullion that I can buy right now @ about 80% of market value. The federal gov't has very nicely mfg these well hallmarked little rounds and fixed the price so that I can keep buying them at that fixed price no matter what happens to the markets. They have a built in "stop loss" factor that says I can always get back what I paid for them in FRN's.
The small flat rate box you can get for free from the post office holds 50 dollars in 2 dollar rolls quite nicely. fill one up, seal it and start another.
They stack quite well.
Number21 wrote:Everybody talks about pre '60 nickels like they're silver or something...what makes them so special? Just 'cause they're older than other nickels?
Is there any physical difference in composition or stamping?
WizardTN wrote:Just buy and stack. The Alloy Recovery program that Canada is heartily pursuing should give you an idea of where it is going. The "Request For Comment" from the mint back in March tells me that the composition will be changed within 2 years.
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(I think Realcent members should pool $50/mo and corner the "nickels market")
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