franklin wrote:What would be your guess if a roll of new ASEs was put up for auction now? No Buy It Now.
Silver Addict wrote:They are killing themselves with their ridiculous fees.
beauanderos wrote:I don't know what a roll of ASE's might fetch, but those danged nutzo bidders on ebay are pissin me off right now. Trying to spend the last of my ebay bucks and getting outbid at $38 to $40 range for frickin generic silver rounds!!!
beauanderos wrote:Silver Addict wrote:They are killing themselves with their ridiculous fees.
Hey David! See... fees kill too, not just guns
silverflake wrote:WHAT WOULD YOU DO:
I have some walking liberty halves graded PCGS MS64, common date (1940s). I bought them years ago on the cheap. Do i sell them and buy bullion? Keep them? I don't have a huge emotional connection to them but they are pretty nice looking.
Throw out your recommendations.
beauanderos wrote:I don't know what a roll of ASE's might fetch, but those danged nutzo bidders on ebay are pissin me off right now. Trying to spend the last of my ebay bucks and getting outbid at $38 to $40 range for frickin generic silver rounds!!!
silverflake wrote:To reiterate what neilgin1 was saying, using government numbers for inflation (!) which comes out to about 3% a year, silver would have to reach $125-130/ounce to match the Hunt brothers high of $50/ounce in 1980. However, using John Williams shadowstats calculations (check out his site - AWESOME - http://www.shadowstats.com) the old method used prior to the G.W. administration (changed by Clinton) puts average inflation rate north of 5%. Using 6% as the inflation rate since January 1980, to match the $50/ounce high we would see silver at over $300/ounce. Seems unbelievable, but I still say that $50/ounce is selling us short guys.
WHAT WOULD YOU DO:
I have some walking liberty halves graded PCGS MS64, common date (1940s). I bought them years ago on the cheap. Do i sell them and buy bullion? Keep them? I don't have a huge emotional connection to them but they are pretty nice looking.
Throw out your recommendations.
barrytrot wrote:silverflake wrote:WHAT WOULD YOU DO:
I have some walking liberty halves graded PCGS MS64, common date (1940s). I bought them years ago on the cheap. Do i sell them and buy bullion? Keep them? I don't have a huge emotional connection to them but they are pretty nice looking.
Throw out your recommendations.
If you aren't collecting them then sell them. Bullion has a better chance of going up sharply than common collector coins do.
neilgin1 wrote:barrytrot wrote:silverflake wrote:WHAT WOULD YOU DO:
I have some walking liberty halves graded PCGS MS64, common date (1940s). I bought them years ago on the cheap. Do i sell them and buy bullion? Keep them? I don't have a huge emotional connection to them but they are pretty nice looking.
Throw out your recommendations.
If you aren't collecting them then sell them. Bullion has a better chance of going up sharply than common collector coins do.
Barry, in all respect, i must disagree, ANY silver one possesses NOW, is our bulwark against being swept into the poverty that is coming. just my opinion, but when folks see "common coins" with that stamp of coinage, USA, they will trust that more than a bar of buillion. Not that bullion will be untradable, but i'm of the opinion, SELL NOTHING. we have NOT EVEN BEGUN to climb to the level i know we will. any paper vehicles of investments, and that includes, silver funds, i regard with the utmost of suspiscion.
our stacks are our only bulwark against getting swept away by forces that swirl around us, forces that promise only poverty and hardship.
barrytrot wrote: Selling the Walkers and buying bullion means you have MORE silver. I don't see how that's bad. And your statement sort of indicates you think "more silver is good" also.
silverflake wrote:To reiterate what neilgin1 was saying, using government numbers for inflation (!) which comes out to about 3% a year, silver would have to reach $125-130/ounce to match the Hunt brothers high of $50/ounce in 1980. However, using John Williams shadowstats calculations (check out his site - AWESOME - http://www.shadowstats.com) the old method used prior to the G.W. administration (changed by Clinton) puts average inflation rate north of 5%. Using 6% as the inflation rate since January 1980, to match the $50/ounce high we would see silver at over $300/ounce. Seems unbelievable, but I still say that $50/ounce is selling us short guys.
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