Morsecode wrote:Great post. I wonder though, does attrition mean the same thing to all coins?
Pennies disappear into cookie jars for years at a time, and re-enter the system, and then back to the jar again. Few people hoard longer. If this were not the case, wouldn't cents from 1971 already have completely disappeared (2.5% x 40 years)..?
I did spend too much time in the sun today so my ciphering could be off.
schockergd wrote:...
Now , taking that information and building out a excel spreadsheet based on mintage numbers, we get the following : There were 158,150,469,073 copper cents minted from 1959 through 1982. Compare this to zinc production (1982-2010) which was 185,967,784,345.
Now , these number seem close , but once we figure in a yearly attrition rate (which *should* exclude hoarding, but does factor in collectors) we come up with 63,362,707,081 coppers and 185,967,784,340 zincs still in circulation today.
Now , this means that while copper sorting, you're seeing an average of 34.07% coppers per box............but you're not.....you're seeing 25% or less. So this means that right around 9% of all copper pennies have been hoarded! Running the numbers again , it seems that pennies are really seeing about a 3.5% attrition rate, 1% over the norm, which I figure is from hoarders. This is interesting, as it also means that if we keep it up, we'll be seeing less than 5% coppers in circulation within 20 years or so, pending nothing changes and zincs still are being made and the mint doesn't intervene.
68Camaro wrote:No time at moment to go back and review the calcs, but the 6B hoarded number just seems believeable (not that that is worth a hoot).
We all think the smelt ban, which was intended to be temporary, will be lifted within 1-3 years. It will happen either when they feel they have enough zincs to keep things going without complaint, or when they decide to phase out the cent altogether (or some combo of the two). Time to sort is now. As soon as the ban is lifted, the Cu cent will not last much more than another year in productive numbers, and diminishing returns will apply which will make it rapidly increasingly difficult to be worthwhile for most people to sort and hoard in numbers.
beauanderos wrote:I get pickups now of mixed "dirty roll" 2011's... with maybe eight or ten darker cents contained. No way am I gonna take the time to crack open the roll and then run them thru, subjecting my machine to additional wear and tear... for, potentially, two or three lousy cents.
schockergd wrote: This is interesting, as it also means that if we keep it up, we'll be seeing less than 5% coppers in circulation within 20 years or so, pending nothing changes and zincs still are being made and the mint doesn't intervene.
schockergd wrote:20 years is my estimate pending no major economic collapse , so on and so forth.
I hand sort nickels and machine sort pennies and am seeing major attrition for pre-60s nickels. Hopefully I can get my machine sorting operation up soon, I'm trying to figure out how to get 4-6 machines all going at the same time and paying someone to watch em
Anyways, I think we're seeing the death of the 'copper penny' although so many are in circulation now. It didn't take more than 15 years to end the wheat penny and push it out of common circulation , so I think maybe 10-15 years after the shield is when we'll start to see some major attrition.
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