TwoPenniesEarned wrote:The only economical copper bullion is one cent coins, full stop. In a deflationary environment many will discount their premiums over spot as they liquidate so you can't build the premiums into your calculation of worth. With that in mind, why would you pay $1.00 for $0.33 in melt and call it an investment? I'd much rather pay $0.01 for something with $0.025 of intrinsic value.
slvrbck wrote:I stack copper pipe and wire. Generally 99.99 pure and easily recognizable. That's my bullion and can generally be had for less than spot
Ricky wrote:Well, I just ordered several 1 0z bars from Provident Metals, they were $1 each. I hope they are as nice as their web site made them look, I'll just put them away in my box and see what happens to copper. Just additional metal to put away, with high hopes, like Silver too.
TwoPenniesEarned wrote:The only economical copper bullion is one cent coins, full stop. In a deflationary environment many will discount their premiums over spot as they liquidate so you can't build the premiums into your calculation of worth. With that in mind, why would you pay $1.00 for $0.33 in melt and call it an investment? I'd much rather pay $0.01 for something with $0.025 of intrinsic value.
CLINT-THE-GREAT wrote:TwoPenniesEarned wrote:The only economical copper bullion is one cent coins, full stop. In a deflationary environment many will discount their premiums over spot as they liquidate so you can't build the premiums into your calculation of worth. With that in mind, why would you pay $1.00 for $0.33 in melt and call it an investment? I'd much rather pay $0.01 for something with $0.025 of intrinsic value.
I really agree with what you are saying... only thing to consider... copper rounds/bars are PURE copper and pennies are 95% copper, and from what I understand copper is really tough to work with so it makes it harder for even backyard metal-smiths to make copper bullion. That is one big reason copper rounds bear a large premium, due to being hard to smelt.
That being said.... I have both copper bullion as well as bags of copper pennies..... nothing wrong with either
-The Great
Engineer wrote:slvrbck wrote:I stack copper pipe and wire. Generally 99.99 pure and easily recognizable. That's my bullion and can generally be had for less than spot
Plus, it's already in a usable form. I'd much rather have a roll of Romex than an equal weight of copper rounds.
InfleXion wrote:CLINT-THE-GREAT wrote:TwoPenniesEarned wrote:The only economical copper bullion is one cent coins, full stop. In a deflationary environment many will discount their premiums over spot as they liquidate so you can't build the premiums into your calculation of worth. With that in mind, why would you pay $1.00 for $0.33 in melt and call it an investment? I'd much rather pay $0.01 for something with $0.025 of intrinsic value.
I really agree with what you are saying... only thing to consider... copper rounds/bars are PURE copper and pennies are 95% copper, and from what I understand copper is really tough to work with so it makes it harder for even backyard metal-smiths to make copper bullion. That is one big reason copper rounds bear a large premium, due to being hard to smelt.
That being said.... I have both copper bullion as well as bags of copper pennies..... nothing wrong with either
-The Great
The refinement process is a big part of why pure copper is nowhere near melt. The cost involved ensures you will never get it for spot so I don't worry about it since the resale value should always be there as long as you find a decent deal. If I can get 1 oz copper rounds for 60-80 cents I will jump on it because $1 is the cheapest retail price you can look to match.
I agree with Clint, and have a couple nice big bags of Canadian copper pennies as well. I figure since they are discontinued it's a potential collector play and a guaranteed metal play. Plus they are 98% instead of 95% like the US coppers.
Ricky wrote:I also save older us pennies (before 1982) to just put away for now. 95% copper is good too but having got into stacking silver .999 bars, I am also trying the 1 oz pure copper just for the variety of it. I haven't got my order from Provident yet but if I can I'll post a picture of them.
Ricky wrote:I got the order from Provident yesterday. Very nice copper bars! I really like the Saint Gaudens ones, super to look at. So I put them away and to see what happens with copper, along with my older pennies and some silver. Keep stacking!
Return to Silver Bullion, Gold, & other Bullion Metals
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 82 guests