AlexTG wrote:I think you already know. But here you go anyway.
If someone sells for 1.5 shipped.
Subtract out the shipping.
Now it's at 1.38
After the first run you have made 38% on investment, or in this case $38 (You can argue if this is worth your time or not but everyone has their idea of "worth it")
Reinvest that money back into your pennies that you are buying at face value.
You are now sitting at $138 dollars in pennies
You sell off $100 as a another 67.8lbs of copper.
You are now sitting on 176.
You get the idea right? And after the third time you would actually be able to sell off two lots.
It would look a little something like this
All dollar values are displaying the amount of copper you have in $'s as apposed to pounds.
1st $138
2nd $176
3rd $214
4th $290
5th $366
6th $480
7th $632
8th $860
9th $1,164
10th $1,582
So after 10 time of flipping, and reinvesting your copper. You now have $1,582.
The amount of time it would take to do this is completely based on your penny supply, processing speed, and ability to find buyers.
But this is why people are willing in some cases to sell their copper at a discount. It will all change when there are no longer any pre-82s in circulation.
And as far as large sellers gow, I agree with smallchange. Its to help develop the market.
highroller4321 wrote:AlexTG wrote:I think you already know. But here you go anyway.
If someone sells for 1.5 shipped.
Subtract out the shipping.
Now it's at 1.38
After the first run you have made 38% on investment, or in this case $38 (You can argue if this is worth your time or not but everyone has their idea of "worth it")
Reinvest that money back into your pennies that you are buying at face value.
You are now sitting at $138 dollars in pennies
You sell off $100 as a another 67.8lbs of copper.
You are now sitting on 176.
You get the idea right? And after the third time you would actually be able to sell off two lots.
It would look a little something like this
All dollar values are displaying the amount of copper you have in $'s as apposed to pounds.
1st $138
2nd $176
3rd $214
4th $290
5th $366
6th $480
7th $632
8th $860
9th $1,164
10th $1,582
So after 10 time of flipping, and reinvesting your copper. You now have $1,582.
The amount of time it would take to do this is completely based on your penny supply, processing speed, and ability to find buyers.
But this is why people are willing in some cases to sell their copper at a discount. It will all change when there are no longer any pre-82s in circulation.
And as far as large sellers gow, I agree with smallchange. Its to help develop the market.
Alex,
Shipping is not your only expense.
If you have 1 ryedale and sort $400 and get 25% copper return. Assuming you have only a few jams thats 2.5 hrs worth of sorting time. Assuming your bank is close and you don't have to wait you have 10 mins pick up time and when returning them using a 4000/min coin counter you have 8 mins counting and 7 mins of waiting for them to change bags. Add in 15 mins worth of driving. Add in 10 mins worth of packaging. Add in $2 worth of tape and $11 to ship. Add 10 mins round trip to the post office.
Machine costs. Ryedale is good for at least 5 million coins. 40000/5000000 = .008% of the machine use. .008 X $500 (cost of new machine) =$4
Sell for 1.5 times shipped.
Sold $150
-$100 FV
=$50
-$2 tape
=$48
-$11 shipping
=$37
-$4 machine costs
=$33
Not factoring in the cost of electricity or the cost to use your car/truck/van or anything else.....
Profit of $33 for 3.5 hrs of work. You made $9.40 an hr and had a profit margin of 8.02% on your investment of $400.
Sell for 1.3 times shipped.
Sold $130
-$100 FV
=$30
-$2 tape
=$28
-$11 shipping
=$17
-$4 machine costs
=$13
Not factoring in the cost of electricity or the cost to use your car/truck/van or anything else.....
Profit of $13 for 3.5 hrs of work. You made $3.71 an hr and had a profit margin of 3.25% on your investment of $400.
Yes, this will go up if you sort more than $400 at once but unless your sorting a lot and cutting down on your driving timw its really not gonna be that profitable to sell for 1.3x shipped.
This is why I don't get how or why people sell for so little...
Kurr wrote:I think I just sold a lot not to long ago for 1.3, maybe 1.4. I needed for something else. In this case it was silver. I just l looked at it differantly I guess.
I saw it as a small amount of effort to place cash into a savings area for 2-3 months, and when I found the deal I wanted, had more in interest than any bank would have paid, by far. I had my intial 100.00 plus 20%.
That made it hurt less than thinking I wasn't maximizing profit or selling below "fair market value".
Either way, you just can't lose with copper cents. [:D}
highroller4321 wrote:AlexTG wrote:I think you already know. But here you go anyway.
Profit of $13 for 3.5 hrs of work. You made $3.71 an hr and had a profit margin of 3.25% on your investment of $400.
Yes, this will go up if you sort more than $400 at once but unless your sorting a lot and cutting down on your driving timw its really not gonna be that profitable to sell for 1.3x shipped.
This is why I don't get how or why people sell for so little...
Sheikh_yer_Bu'Tay wrote:highroller4321 wrote:AlexTG wrote:I think you already know. But here you go anyway.
Profit of $13 for 3.5 hrs of work. You made $3.71 an hr and had a profit margin of 3.25% on your investment of $400.
Yes, this will go up if you sort more than $400 at once but unless your sorting a lot and cutting down on your driving timw its really not gonna be that profitable to sell for 1.3x shipped.
This is why I don't get how or why people sell for so little...
Thanks, Highroller!
I visited your website. Wow. Nice.
You have a lot more experience at Cu cents than me and your breakdown of the math is great.
Once the melt ban is lifted... do you anticipate a glut of copper pennies hitting the market?
Mooski wrote:Let's say that you think that you can sell Cu pennies at 4x face.
And let's say that you can get all the Cu for face value.
If you think it will take 10 years to get from face to 4x face, you need the values of the pennies to double and then double again.
Using the 'Rule of 72' as a guide, that means it will take 5 years to double (and another 5 years to double again) so you're looking at a FOURTEEN POINT FOUR percent return on investment.
Heck, thinking that it will hit 4x in 15 years still puts it around 10 percent.
What's that percentage rate that you're getting from the bank on your money?
Wait a minute... I seem to remember when you first came on the other site saying that you had a goal of accumulating $17,000 face value in silver. Is my memory wrong? As far as my modest stash goes, I do pennies as a hobby, not to make money, so it doesn't make sense to sell at current prices. Not worth the "profit" for the effort right now. It will be though, soon enough. I think once silver and gold take off, copper will follow, and those without the budget for any of the precious metals will turn to base. The 3 tons of CU I have slowly amassed are, for me, acting as an insurance policy against a dollar devaluation.Sheikh_yer_Bu'Tay wrote:For me, Cu is not as good an investment as Ag. What is most telling is the silence of the old timers on this thread. Only three long time participants responded to my original question of "why are you guys not holding out for higher prices?".
beauanderos wrote:Sheikh_yer_Bu'Tay wrote: I seem to remember when you first came on the other site saying that you had a goal of accumulating $17,000 face value in silver
beauanderos wrote:Wait a minute... I seem to remember when you first came on the other site saying that you had a goal of accumulating $17,000 face value in silver. Is my memory wrong? As far as my modest stash goes, I do pennies as a hobby, not to make money, so it doesn't make sense to sell at current prices. Not worth the "profit" for the effort right now. It will be though, soon enough. I think once silver and gold take off, copper will follow, and those without the budget for any of the precious metals will turn to base. The 3 tons of CU I have slowly amassed are, for me, acting as an insurance policy against a dollar devaluation.Sheikh_yer_Bu'Tay wrote:For me, Cu is not as good an investment as Ag. What is most telling is the silence of the old timers on this thread. Only three long time participants responded to my original question of "why are you guys not holding out for higher prices?".
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