theo wrote:D ear Mr. Berko: During the past 25 years, I purchased more than $47,000 in collectible silver coins and beautiful non-silver coins from the Franklin Mint for my retirement because I thought the scarcity and limited-edition minting of these coins would drive up their value over the years and because I believed the silver content in the silver coins would also increase in value. Now I’m 64 and decided to sell these coins to a coin dealer who offered me $2,500 for the whole lot. He told me most of the coins were worthless, and the only coins that had any value were those with silver in them. I was devastated because when I was buying all those coins, the people at the Franklin Mint told me these coins were minted in limited production and would be more valuable to collectors in the future. I called two coin dealers in Detroit (these coins are too bulky to carry around) and both said they had no interest in Franklin Mint coins and said they don’t know any dealers who would buy them from me. My son told me to write you because he said you might know of buyers for them, and at this point I’d be very happy to get at least half of what I paid for them if possible. Please help me if you can. And if you cannot help me, do you think I can sue the Franklin Mint and recover my cost? And could you recommend a lawyer for me to sue them?
Morsecode wrote:Manufactured collectibles rarely are. How anyone can think that a thing in current production is rare enough to increase in value is a sad commentary on American gullibility.
I'm reminded of the demise of baseball cards: start with something legitimately collectible, saturate the market with "limited" editions, bundle them in deal-of-a-lifetime offerings...repeat until the music stops.
Saw an ad in the paper here for 10,000 cards in unopened packs for $99. Wonder how that worked out.
Thogey wrote:DA, the complainer, is a MORON!
Get an lawyer? that's the answer to everything!
I hope he does and spends the rest of his money in a legal battle trying to correct his own stupid decisions.
This is what is wrong with America.
Diggin4copper wrote:A friend of mine had an Aunt who sent his kids Beanie Babies... She owned a gift store.. they had all the rare ones.. He was offered 5 grand for the collection. I told him to sell as fast as he could. He decided to wait; "Ill be able to pay for their college education" is what he said to me.........
Diggin4copper wrote:A friend of mine had an Aunt who sent his kids Beanie Babies... She owned a gift store.. they had all the rare ones.. He was offered 5 grand for the collection. I told him to sell as fast as he could. He decided to wait; "Ill be able to pay for their college education" is what he said to me.........
Morsecode wrote:Manufactured collectibles rarely are. How anyone can think that a thing in current production is rare enough to increase in value is a sad commentary on American gullibility.
I'm reminded of the demise of baseball cards: start with something legitimately collectible, saturate the market with "limited" editions, bundle them in deal-of-a-lifetime offerings...repeat until the music stops.
Saw an ad in the paper here for 10,000 cards in unopened packs for $99. Wonder how that worked out.
barrytrot wrote:
Every year there is the "get rich quick" idea of the century.
You know what? I know a good number of rich people and all the ones I asked told me, "they got rich SLOW."
The only "get rich quick" idea that works is winning the lottery or other prize. The only other thing is insane levels of athletic talent. And even that takes years of cultivation generally.
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