inflationhawk wrote:The melt ban on silver quarters, dimes and halves was lifted in 1969 while they were still being used in circulation. It might be beneficial to do some research on the path taken to lift the silver melting ban in 1969. I don't believe elimination of the penny has to occur before the melt ban necessarily, however I am fully supportive of eliminating the penny altogether regardless of the melt ban status.
inflationhawk wrote:Well, we've had 28 years of creating supply of non copper pennies. There was only 5 years of new supply build up of clad dimes, quarters and halves. Considering the current copper penny percentages throughout the country, I do not see a penny shortage occuring with legalized melting. And if there was, that would accelerate the elimination of the penny altogether. I believe the lifting of the melt ban would be more likely to occur before the elimination of the penny altogether. There is more recent precedent for allowing the melting of currency in circulation than the elimination of a denomination altogether (ala the half penny for example).
68Camaro wrote:...If the ban was lifted now the Cu cent wouldn't survive a year before it was driven down to <1% yield.
ed_vantage17 wrote:I am a sorter/seller. I actually hope the ban stays in place for quite a few more (at least 5) years. Once it is lifted the big dogs will swoop in and the copper well will quickly dry up. As long as the ban is in place the little guys can still make a few fiat by selling to speculators....No rush guys.
Economist wrote:I'm with Ed, Sofa, and Tinhorn. Lifting the ban now would kill the small time hoarders/ sorters in short order. And, in my opinion, it would lead to penny shortages. Let's face it: if the ban were lifted tomorrow, we'd all be at the ATM first thing, draining FRNs, and spending the rest of the day filling up our cars & pickups with fresh unsorted cents.
Economist wrote:I'm with Ed, Sofa, and Tinhorn. Lifting the ban now would kill the small time hoarders/ sorters in short order. And, in my opinion, it would lead to penny shortages. Let's face it: if the ban were lifted tomorrow, we'd all be at the ATM first thing, draining FRNs, and spending the rest of the day filling up our cars & pickups with fresh unsorted cents.
HoardCopperByTheTon wrote:Economist wrote:I'm with Ed, Sofa, and Tinhorn. Lifting the ban now would kill the small time hoarders/ sorters in short order. And, in my opinion, it would lead to penny shortages. Let's face it: if the ban were lifted tomorrow, we'd all be at the ATM first thing, draining FRNs, and spending the rest of the day filling up our cars & pickups with fresh unsorted cents.
You mean you guys don't already do that every day? Why wait for the sky to fall? The end is near!
I am against lifting the melt ban also.. I don't have nearly enough copper hoarded. Once the ban is lifted it will be end of game.
What if they did something similar to Cananda with it's nickels? They changed the composition and the gov't started pulling the 99.9% coins. I don't think they banned the public from melting them either.
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