aev wrote:One thing I find weird.. is look at copper prices compaired to soybeans... really weird, you can almost call a copper fall based on soybeans.. lol
dpwozney wrote:If the long-term equilibrium market value, for the intrinsic metal content of 1946-2011 U.S. Mint nickels, is the same as face value, then the price of copper and nickel would have to decline by about 17.3% from right now, relative to the stated value of “Federal” Reserve notes.
iluc wrote:Copper Pennies, at least, enjoy a huge "margin of safety" in the sense that something worse than 2008 would have to grip us before their melt value fell below face. In the meantime, the cents themselves would be gaining immense purchasing power relative to other assets that were were falling by 50% or more. And the value relative to gold relative to the paper/digital currency supply will only have increased because the policymakers will surely respond with more stimulus than ever. These coins (and, Nickels, too) are interesting in that their investment properties are so unusual: no downside, some potential opportunity cost, and quite a bit of upside if/when they eventually change hands for metal value. Just watch this situation with interest, not fright: you're making net gains as other assets cheapen.
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