mtalbot_ca wrote:Oh yeah...
DO keep the 1969 dimes and 1973 quarters. Those have a variety that is quite expensive. 12,000$ for the large date 1969 dimes and 120$ for the 1973 quarter large bust.
Cheers,
mtalbot_ca wrote:Oh yeah...
DO keep the 1969 dimes and 1973 quarters. Those have a variety that is quite expensive. 12,000$ for the large date 1969 dimes and 120$ for the 1973 quarter large bust.
Cheers,
ZenOps wrote:I doubt it. Coins from 1968 to 1999 were minted in the tens to hundreds of millions per coin type, which for Canada is a lot.
But if you look at it from the world perspective: There are 3 Billion more people on earth now, since I was born (at right around the time they pulled silver from circulation) But it does not seem to have affected the ability of the world to produce more (IE: The spot price of a ton of wheat at $170 has been stagnant for decades) There is no question there is not enough nickel coinage for everyone in the world, only first world nations can afford to use it for their higher denomination coins like loonie, toonie, one and two Euro coins. The exception of course, is the US that still has a 25% cupronickel five cent piece, and the Swiss Franc.
There is that quote that if everyone in the US wanted two ounces of silver coinage, the worlds supply would dry up. Well, you could arguably say that with 3 Billion more people on the planet since the great melt, if everyone wanted two ounces of nickel - it would probably not be an easy task either.
Personally I think the US got spoiled by proximity to Sudbury nickel mine, and Russians to a certain extent also got spoiled by proximity to Norilsk. The vast majority of the rest of the world uses paper or relies on a now digital tally system.
SilverDragon72 wrote:I went to my LCS today for the first time in a while, and I was happy to find more than 10 FV in Canadian .999 Ni nickels, plus some canadian copper pennies too!
I will keep adding to my Ni pile whenever I get the chance. I was surprised to actually find that many nickels today!
Recyclersteve wrote:SilverDragon72 wrote:I went to my LCS today for the first time in a while, and I was happy to find more than 10 FV in Canadian .999 Ni nickels, plus some canadian copper pennies too!
I will keep adding to my Ni pile whenever I get the chance. I was surprised to actually find that many nickels today!
What did they charge for the .999 nickels?
SilverDragon72 wrote:Recyclersteve wrote:SilverDragon72 wrote:I went to my LCS today for the first time in a while, and I was happy to find more than 10 FV in Canadian .999 Ni nickels, plus some canadian copper pennies too!
I will keep adding to my Ni pile whenever I get the chance. I was surprised to actually find that many nickels today!
What did they charge for the .999 nickels?
Just face value! I think they buy foreign stuff at 1/2 face value.....
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