gilpo wrote:How many of you would've hoarded all your coppers in 1982 in retrospect?
Lemon Thrower wrote:gilpo wrote:How many of you would've hoarded all your coppers in 1982 in retrospect?
not me. you are lucky if you can sell your copper cents for 1.7 cents each. if you bought them for a penny in 1981 and held them for 30 years you would realize only 1.78% compounded return. that is well below the rate of inflation, before subtracting for storage costs, etc. you could have earned 6-10% in a bond or 12% in the stock market.
Lemon Thrower wrote:not me. you are lucky if you can sell your copper cents for 1.7 cents each. if you bought them for a penny in 1981 and held them for 30 years you would realize only 1.78% compounded return. that is well below the rate of inflation, before subtracting for storage costs, etc. you could have earned 6-10% in a bond or 12% in the stock market.
Number21 wrote:Lemon Thrower wrote:not me. you are lucky if you can sell your copper cents for 1.7 cents each. if you bought them for a penny in 1981 and held them for 30 years you would realize only 1.78% compounded return. that is well below the rate of inflation, before subtracting for storage costs, etc. you could have earned 6-10% in a bond or 12% in the stock market.
That's if you trust the banks/government. Some of us don't, that's why we hoard metal.
I wouldn't start hoarding just plain zinc, but if I got new boxes of 2010s or 2011s you can bet I'd save them. The numismatic value will be high once the zinc penny is no longer. Imagine if you had a box of never circulated 1983 pennies. Worthless as metal, but, I'd bet worth more than dirty coppers on ebay...
Number21 wrote:Lemon Thrower wrote:not me. you are lucky if you can sell your copper cents for 1.7 cents each. if you bought them for a penny in 1981 and held them for 30 years you would realize only 1.78% compounded return. that is well below the rate of inflation, before subtracting for storage costs, etc. you could have earned 6-10% in a bond or 12% in the stock market.
That's if you trust the banks/government. Some of us don't, that's why we hoard metal.
WizardTN wrote:Zinc and nickel have outpaced gold on a percentage basis since 1980.
Number21 wrote:Lemon Thrower wrote:not me. you are lucky if you can sell your copper cents for 1.7 cents each. if you bought them for a penny in 1981 and held them for 30 years you would realize only 1.78% compounded return. that is well below the rate of inflation, before subtracting for storage costs, etc. you could have earned 6-10% in a bond or 12% in the stock market.
That's if you trust the banks/government. Some of us don't, that's why we hoard metal.
I wouldn't start hoarding just plain zinc, but if I got new boxes of 2010s or 2011s you can bet I'd save them. The numismatic value will be high once the zinc penny is no longer. Imagine if you had a box of never circulated 1983 pennies. Worthless as metal, but, I'd bet worth more than dirty coppers on ebay...
Return to Copper Penny Bullion Investing
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 18 guests