Cu Lung wrote:I hoard both, being Canadian has it's advantages especially with .999 nickels. I doubt that cupronickels will ever be worth much, even if Cu and Ni goes crazy in the base metal markets. The cost to seperate the 75/25% mix is very costly and would pretty much eat any profits you'd make. At current market value of 5.4 cents, you'd need copper at 9.00lb and nickel at nearly 25.00lb to match a pre 1981 Canadian nickel. Which mostly bring 3x FV of 0.15 or 15.00 a lb. I have also wondered about hoarding Canadian 1982-99 cupronickels, though others have recommended it ties up too much capital and is not worth it. Pennies all the way for the Americans.
highroller4321 wrote:Copper Pennies. Not only do you get more value for your money with them but you will be able to see your return on them a lot sooner than you will nickels.
marine70 wrote:I only keep the pre 64 nickels thinking that they may have a collectors value in the future. Regular nickels are just to easy to get why tie your money up. It is fun however to go through them. I also keep all the 2009 nickels and dimes.
ZenOps wrote:Actually, all US coinage is copper in my view.
Its just that dimes and quarters have a 8% nickel coating, and your nickels have 25% nickel content (which means its actually a copper coin, with a little bit of nickel additive) IMO: Your dimes and quarters since 1965 have always just been slightly larger pennies masquerading as nickel coins.
I mean really, Canada now has 2% nickel coated steel coinage (including $2 coins all the way to "nickels") There is no way I'd call a 2% nickel content coin a nickel coin either.
So yes - for the people in the US, you probably want the copper pennies. IMO, the US could never afford a pure nickel coin right from the start, haha! Your copper dollars (Sacagawea, SusanB, Presidential) are just big pennies to me, about 2.5 pennies worth to be exact (8.1 grams)
For people in Canada, you want one of the 1.85 billion pure nickels made from 1922 to 1981, which sounds like a lot - but then you realize that 50 years of nickel production is basically just one nickel for every person in China. And then that nickel starts to look like gold.
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