Sheikh_yer_Bu'Tay wrote:I agree with everything in concept the OP stated except one tinsy little fact he omitted.... The one cent US coin in NOT copper bullion. It is brass. It's the same brass they use on full metal jackets on bullets and is called "gilding metal". http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gilding_metal
They will never be worth 100% of "melt value" to anyone savvy in metals.
Brass cents are a good investment within a diversified portfolio of metals. Hoard them all you want, sell them all you want, but don't delude yourselves into thinking they are the equivalent of 100% copper bullion. It ain't so!
It reminds me of the bank fiasco of 2008, where banksters bundled up large lots of mortgages and sold them as investments to people. They didn't care there was an illusion to the investments and that it could go sour. Then the fools turned around and bought each others bad paper! You know the rest of the story.
JobIII wrote:nice little post with a subtle promotion to finish..
Corsair wrote:The copper cent is purer copper than "premium junk silver bullion" is pure silver. Something to think about.
Lemon Thrower wrote:Corsair wrote:The copper cent is purer copper than "premium junk silver bullion" is pure silver. Something to think about.
The way I think about it, copper cents can't be melted while junk silver can.
As long as the govt is still minting new zinc pennies they will not allow you to melt the old ones.
Lemon Thrower wrote:Corsair wrote:The copper cent is purer copper than "premium junk silver bullion" is pure silver. Something to think about.
The way I think about it, copper cents can't be melted while junk silver can.
As long as the govt is still minting new zinc pennies they will not allow you to melt the old ones.
Lemon Thrower wrote:i thought it was legal to melt 90% silver coinage but not 95% copper. i may be mistaken about the law, but the fact is you can sell silver for less than 2.5% under melt while copper goes for almost 50% under melt.
Corsair wrote:Sheikh_yer_Bu'Tay wrote:I agree with everything in concept the OP stated except one tinsy little fact he omitted.... The one cent US coin in NOT copper bullion. It is brass. It's the same brass they use on full metal jackets on bullets and is called "gilding metal". http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gilding_metal
They will never be worth 100% of "melt value" to anyone savvy in metals.
Brass cents are a good investment within a diversified portfolio of metals. Hoard them all you want, sell them all you want, but don't delude yourselves into thinking they are the equivalent of 100% copper bullion. It ain't so!
It reminds me of the bank fiasco of 2008, where banksters bundled up large lots of mortgages and sold them as investments to people. They didn't care there was an illusion to the investments and that it could go sour. Then the fools turned around and bought each others bad paper! You know the rest of the story.
The copper cent is purer copper than "premium junk silver bullion" is pure silver. Something to think about.
Sure, maybe in relation to spot, we'll have to accept the rate that 40% halves get for silver spot. But who cares? That's like 85%-90% of spot. When copper gets going, and people really want those copper cents, you'll see 75% of melt, if not more, paid for a copper cent.
Remember: A copper penny is more pure than a silver half.
Lemon Thrower wrote:i thought it was legal to melt 90% silver coinage but not 95% copper. i may be mistaken about the law, but the fact is you can sell silver for less than 2.5% under melt while copper goes for almost 50% under melt.
JobIII wrote:nice little post with a subtle promotion to finish.
I'm torn between hoarding copper or just buying into index funds.
VWBEAMER wrote:You said they won't let you melt the copper pennies while they are still making zinc ones....what logic is that based on???
psi wrote:Since the melt ban was supposed to be to protect against shortages, you might expect that it could be lifted for pennies after the percentage drops off to the point where removing the remaining amount would not have a significant impact on the remaining population of circulating coins. That condition could easily be satisfied whether or not there is a second composition change to steel or something else. Really though there is no sure way to know how or when (or even whether) the melt ban will be lifted. Melting is not really necessary to realize higher values though, wheat cents frequently trade for over melt value although they are illegal to melt. All it takes is for fellow investors to believe the coins hold value.
Lemon Thrower wrote:VWBEAMER wrote:You said they won't let you melt the copper pennies while they are still making zinc ones....what logic is that based on???
that is not my logic, it is Congress'.
VWBEAMER wrote:Congress has made no such law.
Find it for me.Lemon Thrower wrote:VWBEAMER wrote:You said they won't let you melt the copper pennies while they are still making zinc ones....what logic is that based on???
that is not my logic, it is Congress'.
Lemon Thrower wrote:JobIII wrote:nice little post with a subtle promotion to finish..
are you referring to me or HCBT and High Roller?
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