slickeast wrote:I hate it when media talks about my coins
Romalae wrote:I'm not sure I'd be very comfortable being in possession of a 10-million dollar coin. There's a point at which I think it's logical to not consider a coin to really be worth it that much. Not only would it make you paranoid about its safety, maintenance, and well-being, but if for some reason (despite being unfathomably unlikely) people suddenly decided that numismatic coins really aren't worth anything, you've just screwed yourself out of $9,999,976. Rarity is only justifiable to a point, in my opinion.
But then again, I am not in that high socioeconomic bracket that's more used to dealing with stakes this high.
Romalae wrote:I'm not sure I'd be very comfortable being in possession of a 10-million dollar coin. There's a point at which I think it's logical to not consider a coin to really be worth it that much. Not only would it make you paranoid about its safety, maintenance, and well-being, but if for some reason (despite being unfathomably unlikely) people suddenly decided that numismatic coins really aren't worth anything, you've just screwed yourself out of $9,999,976. Rarity is only justifiable to a point, in my opinion.
But then again, I am not in that high socioeconomic bracket that's more used to dealing with stakes this high.
Thogey wrote:Romalae wrote:I'm not sure I'd be very comfortable being in possession of a 10-million dollar coin. There's a point at which I think it's logical to not consider a coin to really be worth it that much. Not only would it make you paranoid about its safety, maintenance, and well-being, but if for some reason (despite being unfathomably unlikely) people suddenly decided that numismatic coins really aren't worth anything, you've just screwed yourself out of $9,999,976. Rarity is only justifiable to a point, in my opinion.
But then again, I am not in that high socioeconomic bracket that's more used to dealing with stakes this high.
Dude,
The guy who buys that coin could care less about the logic of spending that kind of money on rarity.
He'll write a check and probably will die having no clue what he did with the 10 million dollar coin.
scyther wrote:By the way this just made me think: How much money would it take to buy one of every coin ever issued by the United States mint? Every year and every mint mark, circulation, proof, bullion, everything? That's something I might like to try if I were a billionaire. Although, if they did mint that trillion dollar coin, even that wouldn't be enough...
Rodebaugh wrote:scyther wrote:By the way this just made me think: How much money would it take to buy one of every coin ever issued by the United States mint? Every year and every mint mark, circulation, proof, bullion, everything? That's something I might like to try if I were a billionaire. Although, if they did mint that trillion dollar coin, even that wouldn't be enough...
There was a guy who did it (or close to it by some folks opinons)
And most of his examples were among the best of the best.
Trivia time.
Rodebaugh wrote:scyther wrote:By the way this just made me think: How much money would it take to buy one of every coin ever issued by the United States mint? Every year and every mint mark, circulation, proof, bullion, everything? That's something I might like to try if I were a billionaire. Although, if they did mint that trillion dollar coin, even that wouldn't be enough...
There was a guy who did it (or close to it by some folks opinons)
And most of his examples were among the best of the best.
Trivia time.
Romalae wrote:I'm not sure I'd be very comfortable being in possession of a 10-million dollar coin. There's a point at which I think it's logical to not consider a coin to really be worth it that much. Not only would it make you paranoid about its safety, maintenance, and well-being, but if for some reason (despite being unfathomably unlikely) people suddenly decided that numismatic coins really aren't worth anything, you've just screwed yourself out of $9,999,976. Rarity is only justifiable to a point, in my opinion.
But then again, I am not in that high socioeconomic bracket that's more used to dealing with stakes this high.
barrytrot wrote:Romalae wrote:I'm not sure I'd be very comfortable being in possession of a 10-million dollar coin. There's a point at which I think it's logical to not consider a coin to really be worth it that much. Not only would it make you paranoid about its safety, maintenance, and well-being, but if for some reason (despite being unfathomably unlikely) people suddenly decided that numismatic coins really aren't worth anything, you've just screwed yourself out of $9,999,976. Rarity is only justifiable to a point, in my opinion.
But then again, I am not in that high socioeconomic bracket that's more used to dealing with stakes this high.
You are thinking of it the wrong way completely. This was not done as an investment it was done as a HOBBY.
So whatever your hobby is that's what it's like. Some people just happen to have hobbies that are expensive
That said: I would bet 10 to 1 odds that when this coin sells in 10 or so years that it is done at a profit. Mainly because the next guy will have the hobby of buying the most expensive coin also. And again that guy won't care about the value because it's his hobby.
And, of course, the buyer is very wealthy. And the buyer in 10+ years will be as well.
scyther wrote:barrytrot wrote:Romalae wrote:I'm not sure I'd be very comfortable being in possession of a 10-million dollar coin. There's a point at which I think it's logical to not consider a coin to really be worth it that much. Not only would it make you paranoid about its safety, maintenance, and well-being, but if for some reason (despite being unfathomably unlikely) people suddenly decided that numismatic coins really aren't worth anything, you've just screwed yourself out of $9,999,976. Rarity is only justifiable to a point, in my opinion.
But then again, I am not in that high socioeconomic bracket that's more used to dealing with stakes this high.
You are thinking of it the wrong way completely. This was not done as an investment it was done as a HOBBY.
So whatever your hobby is that's what it's like. Some people just happen to have hobbies that are expensive
That said: I would bet 10 to 1 odds that when this coin sells in 10 or so years that it is done at a profit. Mainly because the next guy will have the hobby of buying the most expensive coin also. And again that guy won't care about the value because it's his hobby.
And, of course, the buyer is very wealthy. And the buyer in 10+ years will be as well.
That's true to an extent, but still... I don't think they would have bought the coin if they didn't think it would retain a lot of it's value. I don't think the person who bought this views it purely as "spending money on hobby".
beauanderos wrote:had to look it up... I was incorrect in my guessing:
http://www.scvhistory.com/scvhistory/signal/coins/soltaylor110108.html
interesting article
scyther wrote:beauanderos wrote:had to look it up... I was incorrect in my guessing:
http://www.scvhistory.com/scvhistory/signal/coins/soltaylor110108.html
interesting article
That's interesting, thanks. Too bad it was dismantled. I don't see why it says it's impossible to make a complete collection now, though. Just because some are in museums doesn't mean you can't buy them out...
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