by Lemon Thrower » Thu Dec 30, 2010 1:00 pm
i have a different view of the trade off.
where i live, copper only averages about 12.5%.
so you can't compare a box of 100% copper cents with a box of nickels, because the box of cents has to be sorted.
i have done the math at 12.5% for my area and the break even is at a copper price of $10.50. That means if you are going to invest a given amount of cash in unsorted boxes, and storage space is not an issue, you have more value with unsorted cents until copper reaches $10.50, after which its better to buy nickels. the way i figured this i gave zero value to the 25% of nickels which are not copper. If you add a value for that, then the tradeoff moves to a lower copper price. if you get more copper where you live, then the tradeoff moves to a higher copper price.
if anyone wants my spreadsheet, pm me and i'll email it to you.
of course this assumes you are not sorting the coppers. there is an investment in time and energy in sorting coppers and what is best really depends on how you value your time and available alternative uses for your time. personally i have little time for sorting pennies lately, my life is just too busy.
a lot of this is academic for a number of reasons. first, most people will run out of room for unsorted pennies before they run out of dollars. second, many of us intend to keep hoarding until copper is much much higher. third, it remains to be seen what value you can actually realize from the copper cents or nicks - the comparison is just a comparison of intrinsic copper value, not an estimate of future market value. i don't know anyone who has sold any us nickels for more than 5 cents lately.
i have given a lot of thought to this for a while and my conclusions are
- if you have a lot of free time, or you just plain enjoy it, the best deal is to sort pennies and hold the copper and return the zincs.
- if your time is short or valuable, the best deal is to buy sorted copper from other members if you can get it cheap enough. I have bought over $2,000 face for 1.3X or less.
- nickels are an interesting speculation and have some interesting aspects:
I like have some funds outside of the banking system in case the ATMs go down. I can buy groceries or gas with a box of nickels. Also, since i have only face value invested, if i need funds my investment in nickels is very liquid - i can just take them to the bank. If you want to sell your copper cents, figure on a week or so to get paid and a backache to boot.
everyone's situation is different and this is what makes sense for me.
Lets Go Brandon!