TXBullion wrote:I have a theory there is a big exporter to Mexico
creshka46 wrote:I chose #2. The most logical explaination seems to me that population growth really took off sometime after 1982 and so due to demand they have just brought in far more zinc pennies than usual.
TXBullion wrote:I have a theory there is a big exporter to Mexico
JadeDragon wrote:The answer is either dilution due to lots of new coins or a large sorter shipping them out of the country.
TXBullion wrote:I have a theory there is a big exporter to Mexico
TXBullion wrote:In just thinking last few times I crossed the border to Mexico , no one cared when you left but only when you tried to come back
ZenOps wrote:I vote proximity to Mexico. Mexicans have been wary of paper after the 1000:1 devaluation from peso to new peso in 1993.
A box of copper pennies is still a box of copper pennies. A Chilean copper miner might get paid 250,000 pesos a week (one of the best paying jobs in Chile, second only to a silver miner)
You can almost see it happening with the US dollar, maybe a 50:1 devaluation when measured against copper coinage. A 3.11 gram penny in 1981 or an 8 gram mostly copper dollar in 201X - if the US stops circulating pennies like Canada.
Lemon Thrower wrote:the percentages in Atlanta are low also, 12-13%.
Hawkeye wrote:I can see the population growth thing being a potential reason. I'm in Iowa (not much growth) and average around 27-28% very consistently. My sister, who works at a bank in Knoxville, TN (much more growth post '82) gets me a box every now and then. I usually only get 14-15% out of those boxes.
TXBullion wrote:I have a theory there is a big exporter to Mexico
HoardCopperByTheTon wrote:You can also see this by watching which states report seeing the new pennies for the year first. The states that are getting the new pennies fastest tend to have much lower copper percentages.
Return to Copper Penny Bullion Investing
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 2 guests